Friday, November 20, 2009

A fish story

OK, I saw this article:
http://www.theoutdoorwire.com/story/1258709360pj8uhgm39em

Warsaw Grouper Turns Out to Be A Goliath, Angler In Big Trouble
An Alabama man faces a single misdemeanor charge after test results show the
enormous grouper he and his fishing party landed off St. George Island was not a
Warsaw grouper but a protected goliath grouper.Florida Fish and Wildlife
Conservation Commission (FWC) Investigator Eric Johnston said boat owner and
operator Billy Daniels, Moody, Ala., has agreed to the terms of a "deferred
prosecution agreement" with the state attorney's office in Apalachicola, which
stipulates he pay a $150 fine and contribute $150 to Florida's Wildlife Alert
Reward Program. The agreement spells out the misdemeanor charge will be
dismissed after 90 days, assuming Daniels is not charged with other fish or
wildlife law violations in Florida.Daniels, DOB 05/24/58, his son, Shawn of
Stanley, Kan., and two fishing buddies from Kansas, caught the gargantuan
grouper they believed was a legal Warsaw grouper June 25, while fishing 15 miles
southeast of St. George Island in 80 feet of water. Shawn Daniels actually
caught the fish, which measured 82 inches long and 66 inches in girth and was
estimated to weigh approximately 446 pounds.They brought the grouper back to Bay
City Lodge in Apalachicola, posed for photos and dressed the fish on the dock.
After the photos and stories ran in numerous newspapers and showed up on Web
sites and blogs, the calls started coming in to the FWC from those who thought
the fish was a goliath grouper.Johnston said Daniels turned over a sample of
meat for DNA testing. He said Daniels has been nothing but cooperative during
this period.Daniels was cited rather than his son, who caught the fish, because
as captain he is responsible for the fish being landed, Johnston said.Goliath
grouper numbers dropped precipitously in the 1970s and 1980s because of
overfishing. The species has been protected in Florida waters since
1990.Experienced offshore anglers say Warsaw grouper are usually found in
300-400 feet of water. Goliath grouper are typically found in more shallow
coastal waters.


If it takes a DNA test to ID the species of fish, how can you blame the fishermen?

Wednesday, September 30, 2009

GABF 2009

Last Sat night, I attended the largest, most prestigious Beer Fest in the USA, the Great American Beer Festival in Denver. This was the 28th annual fest, and had 400+ brewers (microbreweries and brewpubs mainly) serving 2100+ brews. My friend Brian and I were in line 45 minutes ahead of our entrance time, 5:30pm. Still, I couldn't see the entrance. It was fun watching everyone else walk by us (roughly 10000 for this session), trying to find the back of the line. Many people were in costume, from traditional German men and woman's dress, people in what would normally be softball-like matching shirts, to WILD people dress as everything from fake cops to construction workers.

Two other events were also at the convention complex. Van Morrison was playing one side, and a Sex Show was playing the other. These added to the
strangeness of waiting in line. Still the most common thing we kept seeing was people walking to get in line for the beer fest wearing necklaces of pretzels. Mainly mini pretzels, but also large Bavarian pretzels, and sometimes string cheese and beef jerky still in the wrapper, and the rare Funion.

The line started moving at 5:30 and we were in about 5-10 min later. There were a series of checks. First was ID and ticket, then just ID so we could get an 'over 21' wristband, than going into the hall, giving our ticket to get the 1oz (although it holds 4oz) plastic beer glass.

From there we were let loose upon the hall, and could go up to any booth and ask for a taste. The hall was arranged by region, and then by a-z, with some larger breweries on end-caps, and non breweries on the outside walls. Very quickly I figured I wouldn't try everything, or even everything out of a single category of beer. I didn't want to just drink beer I knew, but I came to the conclusion that it was of little 'value' to me if I found a beer I liked from a place far away that I couldn't get in Colorado. Still, if my cup was empty, I'd look at the sign behind each table listing the brewery, location, and beers offered, and find something I wanted to try. In all, I figured I tried about 50 beers in the 4 hours of the session, or about a beer (12oz) an hour.

My highlight was going to the Sam Adams booth, getting to the front of the line, and hearing the guy next to me ask the server holding pitcher of dark liquid, "Is that what I think it is? The server nodded yes, and I knew that one quest was at an end. I wanted to try Utopia, considered the highest Alcohol by Volume (ABV) beer ever made, at 27% abv. It was the result of an experiment they started in the late 90s to see how high they could get a beer. The server poured me, then Brian, a shot (1oz) and we walked to an open area and I explained to Brian what we had. The smell was intoxicating (pun intended), unlike anything I had smelled before. It was a thick liquid, and left fingers on the glass, much like brandy. I sipped a small amount. It was a very complex taste: sweet, with what seemed to me to be Carmel, butterscotch, vanilla, and other flavors at the same time. It was unreal. I spent the next 1/2 hour milking it, mainly just smelling it with the smallest of tastes, almost a lick of the tongue.
Incredible.
Still, we were only 1/2 way done with the hall, so I had to finish it so I could try other beers. Red Stone Meadery, a local micro, was the only booth giving out mead, but by our (last) session, they were down to only one choice, a mead with beer taste called Nectar of the Hops. It was still mead, so it tasted more like apple juice than beer or wine. If it were more popular (and cool), I would be happy drinking just different kinds of meads.

Getting back to my plan, I looked for breweries in the Colorado area I had never heard of, as well as ones in the Indianapolis area. I sampled some great beers from a place in Broad Ripple called Brugge Brasserie. We must do a meal here over the holidays! We talked to many people from around the country, and it was fun introducing them to local beers that were our favorites (yes, Sigda's Green Chili Beer was one I pushed, to the amazement of the attendees I mentioned it too).

The strangest non-beer thing happening in the hall was in the back. Oskar Blues Brewery, out of Lyons, CO, sponsored a 'Silent Disco'. They had a wood dance floor, and had a DJ mixing dance(?) tunes. People would borrow 80s style headphones that would receive the tunes, and they would dance. At 9pm all the headphones were out, and the dance floor was moving, with a line of people waiting their turn. It was weird to see all these people dancing to a common beat, but being unable to hear any music.

Oh, I was surprised at the demographics of the fest crowd. I expected mainly male college aged, but there were almost as many women as men, and there were many older people there too. (the dance floor was still mainly women)

One other strange custom was noticed. Whenever someone would drop their plastic glass (making a loud notice on the bare floor), everyone in the area would loudly jeer at the person and would sometimes even try to keep the glass away from the person, kicking it back and forth. I found out later, that our session is known for the drunkenness, and that earlier sessions received glass tasters. One attendee had taped his plastic taster to his hand, to avoid dropping it. :)

Brian and I bailed a little after 9pm after hitting the whole hall. Last pour was 9:30, and we wanted to avoid the crowds. We hit Waffle House on the way home (almost a standard place we go to after drinking (Open 24hrs, and kinda sleazy).

We did some other things before the show, but they're not worth writing about, although I will mention we ended up walking a couple of miles before the show (I got blisters on my pinkie toes, which is standard for me whenever I do distance).


Wednesday, July 08, 2009

I lied

In the last post I said I was happy with the Asus EEE 900, and that I wasn't going to get a replacement. Well, I did, yesterday. The netbook I had been eying for a while was a Samsung NC-10, which I wanted for the superior keyboard, for a netbook. In doing some weird research, I saw that some website said the only netbook with a better keyboard was the HP Mini 1000. I looked for it and it isn't available anymore. I saw the colors available, and saw the current models, and tried to find out if they have the same keyboards. One strange variation, is the red and painted Vivienne Tam Edition. I saw there was a Vivienne 1000 and also a 1140. I couldn't really tell any differences between the two, other than HD size.
I went to check some retailer sites to see what models they had available so I could try the keyboards in person. Sams Club showed they carried the NC-10, but many items on their site are order only, and you don't seem to be able to check each store's inventory. I chocked it up to experience, and went to Sams on TUE, my day off, to get stuff for the store, and have some extra time to walk around and see if there's anything else I was missing, and wanted to see what netbook they had on hand. They had only one, a Vivienne Tam 1140NR, and it was an open box, return/repair, and they had it marked at $399, hundreds lower than (for example) the $665 at Best Buy. I played with the displayed model and the keyboard felt good, and I couldn't find any problems with it, other than a weird install of XP Home. It has no drive for the CDs, so I wonder how it got that way, maybe a Restore. Sams quoted me a 30 day return policy, so I put the box in my cart and bought it.
Here's what it is:

Intel® Atom™ N270 Features a 533MHz frontside bus, 512KB cache and 1.6GHz processor speed.
1GB DDR2 memory
10.1" SD LED widescreen display with 1024 x 576 resolution

60GB hard drive (4200 rpm)
Intel® Graphics Media Accelerator 950With 128MB total available graphics memory
Built-in HP webcam

Memory card slot Supports Secure Digital and MultiMediaCard
2 high-speed USB 2.0 ports
Built-in Bluetooth-compatibility
Built-in high-speed wireless LAN (802.11b/g)
Built-in 10/100Base-T Ethernet LAN with RJ-45 connector
Weighs 2.5 lbs. and measures just 1" thin
3 cell Long battery life up to 3 hours (this still sucks)
Vivienne Tam exterior Features a peony-inspired design in vivid reds and violets. The enter key reflects the double happiness symbol.
Microsoft Windows XP Home Edition operating system with Service Pack 3 (SP3) preinstalled
Software package included With Microsoft Works, Adobe Acrobat Reader and more. Also includes 60-day trial of Microsoft Office 2007 Home and Student Edition.
(I haven't checked these out yet)

I got it home and the first thing I wanted to do was a full reinstall of XP Home. I hooked it up to my external DVD burner, bought earlier knowing I was planning on getting a drive-less netbook. I installed XP Home, but the computer was acting weird. The internal speakers wouldn't work, and the screen was stuck at 640x480. It took me a while but I figure out I needed to install also from the Drivers CD. Once that was done, everything seems to be working fine. I like all the extra little things the HP does/has: a light for the wifi/bluetooth, and a switch to turn them off; a light near the AC socket showing it's being charged; a tiny button recessed above the touchpad to turn it off (lit). The Drivers CD installed a little too much, so I'm trimming it down a bit. I licensed (turned on?) my copy of Windows, so I've cleared that hurdle I thought I might have trouble with.

Gonna play more with it the next few days getting the programs I need to play all my files. In this respect, the Easy Peasy install had everything I needed already. Media Player 11 needs a lot of work to be up to UNIX standards for compatibility. I'll decide in a week or two if it's worth keeping.

Wednesday, July 01, 2009

Bread Saga

I continue my saga to make a normal loaf of bread in the bread maker. It took me two returns to get a working Breadman TR875. The first was broken, with the lid cracked and broken, and the second was missing parts, the paddle for mixing the dough. Since I got a working model, I've not been able to make a loaf that looks like a loaf of bread- the top always collapses, and the middle is too airy, and the bread breaks in two. I know I'm getting the mix wrong, or at least not adapting for altitude.

Monday, June 29, 2009

Asus EEE 900 update

I've had this for a while now, so I think the observation period is over, and I can make some conclusions.
I am using this mainly for Internet use. In that role it's almost perfect. It boots quickly, connects to wifi quickly, and surfing seems smooth and seamless, and I haven't noticed any web pages Firefox doesn't like. The keyboard is still too small for me to touch-type on, but you don't do much typing if you're just surfing.
The Unix experiment has been a moderate success. Easy Peasy has a nice interface, is quick to boot, and the installed apps (that is, the Easy Peasy ones, not the stock ones) work very well. However, it is still difficult to find and install additional software. I want Control Panel apps for controlling my keyboard and touch pad. The updater is rather annoying, saying I need to update files every time I boot up. Especially annoying is it saying I should upgrade to Unbuntu 9.4. I have no idea if this is better than Easy Peasy, and while I know that Easy Peasy is a version of Unbuntu, I'd only like the installer to tell me about new versions of Easy Peasy. Also, I am still up against memory storage problems with only 4gb on board, so all these updates are filling up the SSD. I save all my files to a 8gb SD card, so only system programs and files are on the SSD.
As a portable media player, again, a qualified success. It plays all music formats fine, but video sometimes stutters and it's won't play HD video (of course, only my newest work PC will).
When I travel via plane later this year, I may take either this or my small but powerful Archos 605 media player. The 605 is smaller, lighter, a touch screen, has a longer total run time as I have an additional battery for it, and has a 160gb drive, but the Asus has a larger screen, is more flexible, a keyboard, USB ports. Not sure which I'll take. The Archos is better on the plane, and while I'm traveling, the Asus is better once I get there. Most likely I'll take the Asus.

I like the Asus enough that I'm not going to update to another netbook. I feel it would be a waste of money to gain that addition 20% comfort and usability.

Saturday, June 13, 2009

Dizzy?

Haven't had any caffine soda until just now. Dizzyness went away in about 2 days. Was it the caffine? Or something else? I don't plan on trying to find out.

Thursday, June 11, 2009

Dizzy

Having some kind of inner ear problem or something where moving my head from vertical to horizontal quickly or just quickly, I get waves of dizziness, spinning, and nausea. I got little sleep last night, and it continues today. I'm normally OK during the day, but I do have a persistent headache. Took two Tylenol, but no help. I've had this problem before, and it goes away quickly enough that I don't feel the need to go to the doctor. I thought it might be related to me drinking 6oz of a Spike energy drink yesterday morning, but I'm still feeling it today. I made myself burgers last night, and they weren't as well done as I like, but I doubt it was from that. Still, gonna lay off caffeine and sugar for today and tomorrow.

Monday, June 01, 2009

E3 2009 Xbox 360 briefing

Going to live blog this as I watch the PVR.
Beatles Rock Band
Opening cinematic is fantastic. Looks like up to 4 mikes people singing. Only 45 songs on disk. Never got a good look
at the drums. Guitar doesn't seem to have colored buttons on the front. Each song had a unique video. Get Back was the final
rooftop performance. Paul should have spit out the gum.

Tony Hawk Ride
Another unique controller! It might be a 360 balance board ala wii fit. How about a snowboard game with the same controller?
I wonder what surfaces this works well on? And how much space you'll need?

Modern warfare 2 awesome! many environments. unique non shooting activities. on a snowmobile wouldn't it be better to be behind your enemy?

why does g4 refuse to just show the screen? A guy standing motionless is boring.

FF13
You know, showing non exclusives would be better. But, since this is the first FF for 360, it's ok.
Tony and MW2 OTOH...

NOW they mention the rest are exclusives (except for surprises)

Shadow Complex
a 360 live game. looks sorta impossible mission in that its 2D. summer release.

Joyride
another live game. uses avatars, yawn. What's the object? Kart? Social? Winter release.

Crackdown 2
more happenings when you're not around? No game play shown.

Left 4 Dead 2
Thought this was dead Rising 2 for all the trailer.

Splinter Cell conviction
It's been awhile what game play style this time? In game projected flashbacks. Interesting.
Much more offense. I like this but franchise has been stealth based. Wait, what we've seen is stealth? Charging in he survives????
I still like Rainbow 6 better. Fall release.

Forza Motorsports 3
Oct release. Cars airborne/flipping, track first shown in game play is narrow. in car view swiveled a lot. You CAN do that, but generally don't. 400 cars.
car painting may be easier. Toge type tracks seem to be back. I wonder if GT5 will ever come out.

Halo ODST
ODST has 2 stealth weapons and low light vision. Space elevator visible. Lots of flashbacks as you play as other ODST in order to put the story together.
Laser Rocket Launcher seems too powerful.

Halo Reach
Falls 2010 just a tease. Actually halo 4. Beta invite comes with ODST (like it needs it)

Alan Wake
Tomb Raider style game? I like the episode style presentation. Demo shows 'flashlight' game.
And light is a powerful weapon. Another spring 2010 game

360 live
Music: last.fm free. Netflix 1080p no wait and full queue. Live TV from around the world. Sky.
Zune video? Why? even uses Zune logo. group viewing. Facebook. The further elimination of the PC.
And twitter. while you're doing what? Again, not a computer, no regular keyboard. Normally I'm not close enough
to use a keyboard.

Metal Gear Solid: Rising! surprise.. exclusive? Teaser shows Raiden.

New camera 'controller' looks impressive. even showed shifting a car. An open mouth. Full body. Full voice recognition. So, you leave it on 24/7 so it's ready
for you, or do you use a CONTROLLER to turn it on. Very 1984. Project Natal.
Speilberg! Boom Blox? Make interactive entertainment more accessible. Looks healthy making. Still a bit of lag, too much.
Bunch of tech demos. It is higher tech than previous camera apps. Lionhead Milo AI demo fantastic, very Diamond Age. Never need a real friend again. It's too good.
If I'd see this, I'd look for the man behind the curtain. XXX industry is salivating.

presentation ends.

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Awareness: 100 pennies, the $10 bill, the Color Code

Many people describe awareness in different ways. I'm reading Trail Safe right now, and it's talking about seeing vs awareness. It talks about the military & law enforcement Color Code of danger awareness. Last week, Michael Bane talked about awareness on his podcast as having 100 pennies to spend. Motorcycle training guru Keith Code describes it as a ten dollar bill. They're all talking about the same thing, with different terms.

Attention.

My beliefs are closest to what Keith Code talks about, but it applies to more than just motorcycling. He says you have $10 to spend on your awareness. But, as you gain experience, you need to use less of that $10 for the same things. When you first start riding, you're spending a lot of your $10 to keep the bike upright and going the right direction at the right speed. You're still learning the controls, the amount of clutch needed, which pedal does what, etc. People will honk their horn instead of canceling their turn signal. However, as you gain time with the motorcycle, all these things become subconscious, allowing you to spend more of that $10 on other parts of your riding. You can't ignore those basic operations, but you spend very little on them. Professional road racers are able to adjust their line through a corner in inches, and can run the same line lap after lap. My line would vary every lap by yards.

I was driving in the mountains Sunday. We were in a hilly area, with many blind crests and turns (heavy forest and hills). It has also rained so the roads were wet. It was cloudy. As I reached each bend, each turn, each rise, each valley, I was concentrating on the road, trying to figure out where it was going next. I spent very little concentrating on my speed, yet it stayed relatively constant. My steering inputs were smooth. I was also watching for traffic (oncoming and cross), and due to a sign posted miles earlier, I was looking for bicyclists. Yet, as I peaked a rise and I saw the road straight in front of me, my passenger called out "DEER!". I was passed them before it registered what he was talking about: a small herd of deer had just crossed the road and were starting up the hillside. I would have seen a deer in the road, and I think I would have caught the movement of a deer moving towards the road, but the brown deer, slightly above my sight line, off to the side, against the clear brown hillside were completely missed until it was too late to do anything about them. It's a filter I have. I was spending less of my attention on these other inputs.


Counter example. I was riding my motorcycle on a long trip. In the mountains again. I come around a bend and see the pavement is bright red. I follow the red to see an elk carcass in the culvert beside the road. I was looking at the road, so I saw the red. I wonder if my friend and others saw the elk first?


As I said, this applies to everything. At my store, I use it to catch shoplifters, a hunter uses it to spot game, a police officer to see crimes, a teacher to catch mistakes.

Saturday, May 09, 2009

Asus EEE 900 running Easy Peesy!!!

It works!!!!  Help page told me to hit esc when booting and select the USB stick.  I tried to change it in the BIOS, and that wasn't working, but this did!  A screen came up and asked what I wanted to boot off of, I selected the USB stick, and it booted Easy Peesy.  It's a simple interface, but still a LOT more powerful than default.  I'm gonna play around with it a bit before I wipe the Asus and install it permanently.  I wonder how this will effect the F9 restore option?

Asus EEE 900 MUST- KEEP- TEMPER

I'll go back to the story later, this post is current time.
I'm still trying to get better use out of this puppy.  I'm still stuck using the default dumb (easy) interface.  I thought I had outsmarted the machine, and planning on installing Easy Peesy Ubuntu, made especially for laptops, and it even lists my PC900 on the compatability list.  I followed the directions at http://www.geteasypeasy.com/.  I went out and bought a 4mb USB stick for it, downloaded and ran the installer and installed it on the USB stick, but now I cant figure out how to boot off of it.  I tried changing the bios, tried all three USB ports, but can't get it to work.

Let me step back.  There was one weird thing I did to get to the above.  I couldn't get the Asus to run the installer program, so I D/L the windows version and ran it on my desktop PC.
Gonna check the help page

Friday, May 08, 2009

Asus EEE 900 analysis pt 3: other annoyances

One thing that's annoying about the PC900 is that it has a hard time connecting to wifi. Even though it's at 100% signal, the ASUS sometimes fails to connect on startup and gives me an error. A simple click and it works though.
I'm jumping ahead in the story, but I'm wondering if it's this version of linux's problem? If I installed another version, I'd lose the simple interface (good for me, bad for dad), but it might fix the problem. I'm installing another version (Ubuntu) on a USB drive, gonna try booting with that and see if it changes anything.

The early bird gets old worms

Today, sellout.woot.com had a better version of the ASUS EEE PC900 for sale. It was a 900A at $160, 10 more than I paid. For that you get the MUCH better Intel Atom 1.6Gz proscessor and twice the RAM at 1GB. Still a 4GB drive, no webcam, and still installed with Linux.

The Atom processor is faster than mine, and uses less power, so figure 4 hours vs 3 hours of battery life on mine.



I considered buying one and giving my 900 to my dad, as I think it'd be perfect for him given the appliance nature. I may still do this and buy something else.

Asus EEE 900 analysis pt 2: Keyboard

It's been said before, but I have to say it again: the keyboard is too small. None of these post have been fully done on the 900 as I type slower on it or there are many errors. The most common errors are a single space after a period, and hitting the 9 key instead of the I key. If the lights are on and the laptop is on a table, I can go at an ok speed touch typing while looking at the keyboard, or even slower 'hunt and pecking'.

I use my left pinky to hit the Shift key, so the layout of the arrow keys and the right shift key doesn't bother ME, but I understand that putting the shift key to the right of the up arrow annoys some. I must like this part of the layout, as I can use all four arrow keys in the dark without any problems.

I miss having a separate numeric keypad. I use it a lot on a regular 101 keyboard, and I keep hitting the wrong number on the top row of the small keyboard because it's shifted one over, with the 1 key being at the far left side of the keyboard, instead of the ` key.

Thursday, May 07, 2009

Asus EEE 900 analysis pt 1: DRIVE SPACE

I knew this computer would be short on drive space, but I figured I'd delete the programs I wouldn't use (e.g. Skype, Learn Chinese). There's no way to remove any icons or uninstall any programs with the 'easy' GUI.
There's a Disk Space program, and out of the box, it's 66% full. Once it's done doing updates, it's 87% full. This leaves me with 526mb to work with. There's an Add/Remove Program application, but I can't remove anything, just add a handful of selected programs, and even one can fill the rest of the drive. These programs, once installed, can be removed, but that's it.
OK, how to fix this? I found out about the Terminal/Console. This get me to a linux prompt, and I remember some of the commands I used 20 years ago: CD (change directory), LS (list). Still I didn't seem to find a directory were the installed programs were, and no way to remove them. (A week later I did finally find the programs, but I didn't have permission to delete them.) The default console is real dumb, as I couldn't even cut or paste, so as I explored and attempted fixes, plus using the undersized keyboard (great for hunt and peck, but I can't touch type with it without hitting the wrong keys all the time), I had to keep double checking my work to make sure I was typing the correct command.

I check the wiki I found, and see one of the easy things to do is change the default console. I change to one where I CAN cut and paste from another window.

One problem down.

Asus EEE 900 arrived and unboxed and observed

I was eager for the day when this was to show up. As mentioned above, this was an inexpensive computer with the specs to match: 8.9" screen, Card reader, microphone (but no web cam), 3 USB ports, undersized keyboard (90%), Wifi, Intel® Mobile 900 MHz CPU, 512MB DDR2 RAM, 4GB SSD (really?), speakers, VGA out, earphone jack, 9"x 7" x 1.5", 2.2lbs (1kg). Linux.

The package came with the computer, the battery, AC recharger, customer service sheet, user manual, and recovery CD (computer has no drive). Not much. The battery was clipped on and I charged it up while looking at the paperwork. The customer service sheet was a quick reference sheet, and the manual wasn't much better, but gave more detailed descriptions of the installed apps.

This leads directly to my first comment: it's setup to be an appliance. I was shocked that the interface was a series of tabs (Internet, Work, Play, Settings) with giant icons for the various programs. I was expecting it to be much harder to use, or at least similar to the mac or PC graphical user interface (GUI). However, this has turned into a bad thing, as I'm stuck with it (for now), and can't modify it at all (except for a favorites tab where I can have a BEST OF installed programs list).

Wednesday, May 06, 2009

Asus EEE 900 ordered

I've finally bought my first laptop. I'd been planning on getting some sort of laptop for a while: I bought a wireless mouse 4 months ago, and bought a external DVD/CDROM 2 months ago. I knew I wanted a netbook, but I was originally planning on getting a Samsung NC-10 at around $425. Instead, I saw a refurbished Asus EEE 900
on Woot.com for $150. There was a slightly upgraded version (2gb SSD and Windows XP instead of Unix) for $175 on their sister site, but I knew XP needed a full GB of RAM, and b0th models had 512kb.
Also, I wanted to try a unix machine to see the differences from Windows and Mac. While I TTY and use UNIX to access an old email account to this day, I haven't used unix since college back in the 80s.
Finally, I wanted to try the cheapest machine I could find to help me decide what features I liked when getting a 'real' laptop later. What features did I hate, which could I live with? This might be fun. A friend called it a hobby.
This is 180 degrees from my regular views on computers. I believe computers should be appliances, and work every time, not constantly needing attention and upgrades. This is why I don't do PC gaming anymore: I hated the 'upgrade game' I had to play whenever I bought a new game.

I ordered it and waited for it to arrive.