Moving is hard work

I don’t like packing up everything I own. I have a lot of stuff and most of it is heavy. I also use some of it every day and that stuff can never be put in a box.

Who wants to be a Superhero?

It’s a reality TV show hosted by Stan Lee. It’s pretty bad.

But, it had some surprising parts in it. Like many reality shows, there were several tests that the contestants had to take part in. Many of them were really pathetic. A few were secret tests where the real goal wasn’t to win a race, but maybe to help someone. Some of the tests were really about trying hard and not giving up. It revealed some real dedication and compassion I didn’t expect to see in a cheesy, low quality, television show.

Obviously this is television and everything was controled and the show is made up of only the footage we are allowed to see. Even if it’s not 100% directly staged, it’s all “fake”. But it did make me wonder what a real test of heroic traits would be like. A test sans the raw publicity and narcism.

Dirty Jobs

One television show I try not to miss is Dirty Jobs. It’s pretty simple in that the host basically visits people with “dirty” jobs and participates. Mike Rowe is this intrepid host and he really goes all out to get into the jobs, even if he knows abosultely nothing about the profession. This is what TV should be like. Intelligent, witty, and fun, all without taking itself seriously.

VPNs are a hack

I don’t have a problem with Virtual Private Networks (or VPNs) as a technology. They serve a purpose and I do work with them a lot where I am currently employed. But, I have come to the conclusion that using them for common or casual remote access is a total hack.

For the remote computer, the VPN essentially takes that remote system and virtually places it on the office network. That’s the hack. Instead of using secure technology and SSL tunneling, you “fake” having the computer on the office network. Obviously this is sometimes required, but should remote users be using VPN just to send and recieve mail? I’m not even sure you need a VPN for file access if you have a good, secure portal that allows uploads and downloads. End users dependent on VPNs for access to their day-to-day tools are depending on a single point of failure. If the VPN doesn’t work, the user is out of commission.

I feel that a VPN should be used to connect office LANs together and as an emergency for remote users who can’t get what they want through normal secure methods.