Websites: Voicemail Cheats

November 2, 2005 – 6:06 am

Have you ever heard the gamers talking about visiting “cheat” websites. These sites provide them with secret routes and tricks for beating computer games.

Wouldn’t it be neat if there was a “cheat” for finding your way through the telephone answering system menus at big corporations so you could find a real person.

Well there is. The next time you need to call the cable company or an airline, check Find-A-Human first. It can save you a lot of time and frustration. The site even lets you add cheat codes to the database, if you know of any.

CLICK HERE:

Find-A-Human

Website: Google Scholar

October 30, 2005 – 19:02 pm

Do you have kids in school who dread writing research papers? Better yet, are you going back to get your degree? Well the Google’s Scholar site is the answer to your dreams. It won’t write your paper for you but it is the next best thing. You simply enter your search term to get a list of relevant articles. For each search result, you can have Google find references to the article on the Web or in other academic texts.

If the book or paper is in Google’s system, you can read a portion of it if you have a free account. Google can even help you locate the text at your local library.

Please pass this on to any students you know.

CLICK HERE:

Google Scholar

Fall Back and Smoke Detector Check

October 28, 2005 – 22:17 pm

Make sure you take a nap tomorrow so that you can stay up until 0200 hrs. on Sunday to turn your clocks back. Since you are going to be up late anyway, go ahead and check the batteries in your smoke detectors.

Virginia Gulf Hurricane Relief Update

October 27, 2005 – 16:45 pm

Personnel Sent to Help in Gulf Hurricane Relief Since the Start of the Hurricane Katrina Response

State Agencies

Department of Conservation and Recreation – 2
Department of Emergency Management ? 15
Department of Health – 2
Department of Game and Inland Fisheries ? 24
Department of Social Services – 3
Department of Transportation ? 2
National Guard ? 758
State Police ? 73

Localities

Alexandria County – 5
Arlington County ? 6
Chesapeake City ? 27
Chesterfield County ? 62
Fredericksburg City ? 1
Henrico County ? 28
King George County ? 1
Northern Virginia (personnel not attached to a specific locality) ? 239
Prince William County ? 14
Roanoke City ? 12
Spotsylvania County ? 4
Virginia Beach City ? 18

Updated: 10/27/05

Virginians Continue to Render Assistance

October 26, 2005 – 22:15 pm

I wanted to re-print the following message from the Virginia Department of Emergency Management because all Virginians should be proud of our folks who rendered assistance to the gulf states.

Virginia continues to send personnel, equipment and supplies on a rotating basis to the areas affected by hurricanes Katrina and Rita. So far, Virginia has sent more than 1,100 local and state personnel to the Gulf States through Emergency Management Assistance Compact requests, coordinated by the Virginia Department of Emergency Management.

Seven localities in Virginia have sent more than 120 personnel to the affected area, to assist with law enforcement, firefighting and emergency operation centers.

In addition, several Virginia state agencies have participated in the Katrina relief effort. Virginia’s National Guard, State Police, and departments of Emergency Management, Forestry, Health, Fire Programs, and Game and Inland Fisheries currently have personnel in the region.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency and the American Red Cross are assisting more than 15,000 evacuees now in Virginia. The Commonwealth is working with federal and local officials as well as faith-based organizations to help evacuees and the surrounding communities access resources for assistance.

Town Pickett, a temporary shelter and resource center established at Ft. Pickett, near Blackstone, Va. is closing at the end of October.

Is it Time To Reconsider Microsoft Office?

October 21, 2005 – 18:16 pm

Sun Microsystems is betting that individuals, businesses and government agencies may be willing to try a new full-featured office productivity suite that’s compatible with Microsoft Office at just a slice of the cost.

Sun’s new StarOffice 8 offers powerful and integrated word processing, spreadsheet, presentation, drawing, and database capabilities. With a download a price of $69.95, and volume discounts for businesses, StarOffice may prove to be worth giving a try, especially since Office 12 will require users to learn a new interface anyway.

With improved Microsoft Office compatibility and conversion, OASIS OpenDocument (xml) format for global compatibility, free PDF export capability and exellent migration tools to ease the transition, the G-man in Redmond may have to deal with a viable competitor.

Check out the Sun StarOffice 8 and pay particular attention to the generous enterprise licensing terms.

Virginia Voter Registration

October 10, 2005 – 18:05 pm

If you live in Virginia and you want to vote on November 8, you have until tomorrow at 1700 hrs. to register.

Website: Where the Heck is Podunk

October 10, 2005 – 6:13 am

Want to know a little demographic information about your city or town for a school assignment or a business proposal.

Browse the statistics, find local attractions or even check weather forecasts. You can check the top 10 lists even or the Starbucks quotients page.

This is definitely the place to check if you are thinking about re-locating to a new community.

CLICK HERE:

www.epodunk.com

Load Your Internet Software on a USB Drive

October 9, 2005 – 15:35 pm

When you travel, it can be a pain getting your email, even if you have access to an internet connected computer other than your own. You have to remember all of your bookmarked pages, usernames and passwords. Well, John Haller has made things a lot easier by developing portable internet applications that you can load on a usb flash memory drive.

Portable Firefox is a fully functional package of the Mozilla Firefox web browser optimized for use on a USB key drive. It has some specially-selected optimizations to make it perform faster and extend the life of your USB key as well as a specialized launcher that will allow most of your favorite extensions to work as you switch computers.

It will also work from a CDRW drive (in packet mode), ZIP drives, external hard drives, some MP3 players, flash RAM cards and more (Note: It will not run from read-only media like a CD-R, but Portable Firefox Live will).

You may also be interested in Portable Thunderbird, an e-mail client; Portable Sunbird, a calendar program; Portable NVU, a html editor for editing web pages, and Portable OpenOffice, an office suite.

I easily fit a copy of Thunderbird, with all of my e-mail accounts loaded, Firefox, including my bookmarks, and Portable NUV, with all of my websites pre-loaded, on a 128 mb usb drive. Neat stuff.

CLICK HERE:

JohnHaller.com

Website: Gmap Pedometer

October 5, 2005 – 6:33 am

I am not impressed by web pages very often but this has got to be one of the most impressive sites I have seen in a long time, especially if you are a runner or a cyclist.

This site uses Gmap satellite maps to enable you to map out your route, then it gives you the precise mileage. Just locate your area by zooming the satillite view in to your area, click the start recording button and then double click each intersection to draw out your proposed route. Click on the instructions button for additional information.

CLICK HERE:

Gmap Pedometer

Transportation Secretary Mineta Announces Record Safety Belt Usage in the U.S.

October 4, 2005 – 7:46 am

A record 82 percent of Americans wear their safety belts while driving or riding in their vehicles, U.S. Secretary of Transportation Norman Y. Mineta announced today at the Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD) National Conference, in Washington D.C.

According to a scientific survey by the DOT?s National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, between 2004 and 2005, 10 percent of non-users adopted the habit of buckling their safety belts, Mineta said.

?The fact that safety belts save lives is starting to click with the American people,? Mineta said. ?With safety belt usage at a record high 82 percent, we are on the road to a safer America. And today, we are closer than ever to reaching our final destination.?

In the past five years, safety belt use has increased steadily from 71 percent in 2000 to 82 percent this year, he noted.

At a rate of 82 percent, Mineta said, safety belts are preventing 15,700 fatalities, 350,000 serious injuries, and $67 billion in economic costs associated with traffic injuries and deaths every year. The increase in belt use over the past year alone has prevented 540 fatalities, 8,000 serious injuries, and $1.8 billion in economic costs, he added.

The Secretary said the success was due in large part to states that have passed primary safety belt laws. Twenty-one states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico have primary safety belt laws that allow police officers to stop a motorist solely for belt violations. South Carolina will become the 22nd state with a primary law that takes effect in December.

Secretary Mineta also noted that a new program developed by the Administration makes incentives available for states that pass primary enforcement laws or achieve an 85 percent safety belt usage rate for two consecutive years. The amount of the incentive will be almost five times of a state?s annual base highway safety funding.

According to the NHTSA survey, primary law states averaged 85 percent belt use in 2005, compared to 75 percent in states with secondary laws.

Significant increases in belt use were documented in two categories targeted by NHTSA?s ?Click it or Ticket? campaign ? pickup truck occupants and rural communities. Both increased an average of three percentage points from 2004.

The survey also measured motorcycle helmet use in the U.S. Between 2004 and 2005, the use of DOT-approved helmets dropped from 58 percent to 48 percent nationwide. Helmet use in states without mandatory laws was 37 percent.

Click here to view results:

Safety Belt Use In 2005 — Overall Results

Motorcycle Helmet Use in 2005 — Overall Results

Website: Meebo Is For Me…and You

October 2, 2005 – 8:46 am

If you work in place that blocks instant messenging like those offered by AOL or MSN, you may be able to work around the block to communicate using Meebo. This site supports a number of instant messaging services including Yahoo!, MSN Messenger, AIM and Jabber. You can login to any or all of them at once and you don’t have to install any software!

CLICK HERE:

www.meebo.com

Men’s Health – Juicers in Blue

October 1, 2005 – 17:01 pm

SPECIAL REPORT: COPS ON STEROIDS

Is the recent focus on steroids in baseball helping to cover up an even worse scandal? More than ever, police officers are juicing up to get an edge on criminals?but at what price? Cops have long been a hush-hush subset of anabolic steroid users, says a PA State University sports-science professor: “Most of the police officers ?who have used these drugs consider them tools of the trade.”

One officer estimates that 20 to 25 percent of his partners are using steroids. Such incidents are so widespread that the DEA has published a pamphlet called Steroid Abuse by Law Enforcement Personnel. Still, very few police departments actually screen for steroids. The October issue of Men’s Health contains an investigative report on this issue.

Congratulations to the Swishers

October 1, 2005 – 8:30 am

Congratulations to Jammie Swisher, who recently graduated from the Roanoke City Police Academy. As he begins his career, he will be walking in a well worn path.

His father, Buddy Swisher, has had a tremendous impact on numerous officers and deputies throughout the Roanoke Valley as a driver training instructor. While serving with the Roanoke County Police Department for 30 years, Buddy was a driver training instructor at Cardinal Criminal Justice Academy. After a short break when where he claimed to be retired, he returned to police work with the Carilion Health System PD and started right back instructing driver training.

Congratulations for a job well done to both father and son.