Tuesday, January 29, 2008

And Oakwood, Too

The Oakwood Primary Center is taking over the Barnes and Noble store on Rt. 110 in Huntington on Feb. 8 for its after-school "fun"draiser.

A percentage of all books and food sold during this time will go to the PTA to benefit the children of Oakwood.

Fun activities include a Valentine's Day craft, story time with some of our favorite teachers, stickers, games and prizes. Plus there will be a children's art show and the Oakwood Chorus will sing.

Please join us between 3:30 pm and 7:30 pm and support the Oakwood Primary Center.

Whitman Fund-Raiser

South Asia Fundraiser Night is scheduled for the Performing Arts Center on Friday from 7:30 - 9:30 p.m. There will be henna tattoos, delicious South Asian food, gorgeous South Asian jewelry for sale, raffle prizes including gift cards worth over $200, a fashion show, and much, much more. Tickets are only $4 in advance and $5 at the door. All proceeds will be donated to Mercy Corps to help to rebuild a school in South Asia destroyed by the 2005 earthquake.

Monday, January 28, 2008

Regents Heck

Teenager survived her first Regents exam, ever, in an honors class. Did pretty well, actually. She doesn't do really well with tests--there's always some sort of sloppiness that cuts into her grade, for reasons I can't fathom since she has, as her teachers always say, an organized mind. I really think she doesn't know how to study for a big test and that's something she has to work on. Talking with a co-worker with a daughter going through exactly the same thing at Huntington High, we realized we were more worried for them than they were.

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

'Idol' Contest at Whitman

"Whitman Idol Contest" on Friday
The Whitman High School Lamplighters and the Junior class of 07-08 will are presenting a “Whitman Idol Contest” on Friday at 7 p.m. at the Walt Whitman Performing Arts Center.

Finalist performers in three age categories who auditioned earlier will compete for a $100 cash prize. The finalists were notified Friday, and the age groups are:

Newsday has more.

Saturday, January 12, 2008

Oil Heat

Interesting: look at how much higher gas prices are in Huntington.

Also, I've been chatting with someone about home-heating oil prices. He, and others have recommended keeping a little kerosene as a backup for emergencies, such as when you run out and need a little fuel while waiting for a delivery. It started with a question about using diesel fuel as an alternative to home heating oil--apparently it stinks to high heaven. Here's the explanation about kerosene:

Just 2 comments on the diesel/heating oil etc. Diesel is heating oil -- only a different grade (No. 1 through No. 6 -- with No. 1 cleanest, No .2 the typically delivered home heating oil down to No. 6 for large industrial oil furnaces with "scrubbers" to preclean and precondition before it will actually burn). In fact, the same filters are used in large trucks as are (or at least should be) on your burner.

If you run out, you're better off to get kerosene instead of diesel and add it to your heating oil tank. It works the same -- only much, much cleaner. And, you save money because you do not have to pay as much in the taxes on the kero. Diesel is $00.185 cents per galls (CPG) in federal tax and typcially another 30+ cpg in State taxes THEN add the sales and gross receipts tax. WHereas kero pays only the sales/gross receipt tax. Personally, we keep 10 gallons of kero stored in the garage through the winter -- that way if the we run out unexpectedly, I can get through 2-3 days with the kero. But more importantly, if the electric goes out for any long period, we can drain the heating pipes and use the kero in our old reliable kero heater. If all goes well through the winter, we just use up all the oil and add the kero to the tank to clean and condition the system in the Spring.

Friday, January 4, 2008

Shopped at Sears?

If you have shopped at Sears and signed up for its "community" online, you might want to get hire someone to clear away the spyware. Like, now.
Security guru Bruce Schneier reports on Sears and its very disturbing spyware.
Is Sears Engaging in Criminal Hacking Behavior?
Join "My SHC Community" on Sears.com, and the company will install some pretty impressive spyware on your computer:

Sears.com is distributing spyware that tracks all your Internet usage - including banking logins, email, and all other forms of Internet usage - all in the name of "community participation." Every website visitor that joins the Sears community installs software that acts as a proxy to every web transaction made on the compromised computer. In other words, if you have installed Sears software ("the proxy") on your system, all data transmitted to and from your system will be intercepted. This extreme level of user tracking is done with little and inconspicuous notice about the true nature of the software. In fact, while registering to join the "community," very little mention is made of software or tracking. Furthermore, after the software is installed, there is no indication on the desktop that the proxy exists on the system, so users are tracked silently.
Here is a summary of what the software does and how it is used. The proxy:

Monitors and transmits a copy of all Internet traffic going from and coming to the compromised system.

Monitors secure sessions (websites beginning with ‘https'), which may include shopping or banking sites.
Records and transmits "the pace and style with which you enter information online..."
Parses the header section of personal emails.
May combine any data intercepted with additional information like "select credit bureau information" and other sources like "consumer preference reporting companies or credit reporting agencies".
If a kid with a scary hacker name did this sort of thing, he'd be arrested. But this is Sears, so who knows what will happen to them. But what should happen is that the anti-spyware companies should treat this as the malware it is, and not ignore it because it's done by a Fortune 500 company.

Here's some more:
CA Security Advisor Research Blog
Managemyhome.com: Another privacy issue for Sears

"Hey Dad, did you guys by any chance buy a new sewing machine from Sears on September 30th?"

"We did. How did you know that?"

"I just found it listed on a Sears web site. It looks like they have another privacy problem."

We were informed about managemyhome.com by Heather, who left the following comment on Benjamin Googins' last blog entry:

OMG. It gets worse! check out a sears site managemyhome.com. Once you register, you can look up major purchases for ANY address. All you need to do is enter a name address and phone number and if the person attached to that info has made a major purchase at sears you get that info!! They have no real controls in place -- you have to enter an onscreen code and they say that keeps your info safe, but that does not stop someone from entering other people's contact info to see their product purchases. This brings casing someone's house to a whole new level.

Thursday, January 3, 2008

Driver's Ed

If you're a parent of a dying-to-learn-to-drive teenager at Walt Whitman High, here's some driver-ed info:
Registration forms are currently available in the Main Office. Please read instructions carefully. Returned forms will be accepted from seniors only tomorrow. If more than 80 registrations are received by 3:00 PM, participants will selected by lottery. If less than 80 registrations are received, forms will be accepted from seniors and juniors on Monday. Remaining participants will be selected by lottery, with seniors receiving preference. Juniors will be accepted only if openings have not been completely filled by seniors by 3:00 PM on Monday.

Tuesday, January 1, 2008

Disenfranchisement

The Times notes that the Iowa caucuses disenfranchise night workers by not requiring employers to give them time off to vote. But guess what? So does the South Huntington school district. Budget votes are held in late afternoon to evening; good luck if you work nights.

Got a Night Job? Then No Caucus for You
DES MOINES — Jason Huffman has lived in Iowa his whole life. Lately he has been watching presidential debates on the Internet, discussing what he sees with friends and relatives. But when fellow Iowans choose their presidential nominees Thursday night, he will not be able to vote, because he is serving with the Iowa National Guard in western Afghanistan.“Shouldn’t we at least have as much influence in this as any other citizen?” Captain Huffman wrote in an e-mail message.

He is far from the only Iowan who will not be able to participate.

Because the caucuses, held in the early evening, do not allow absentee voting, they tend to leave out near-entire categories of voters: the infirm, soldiers on active duty, restaurant employees on the dinner shift, medical personnel who cannot leave their patients, parents who do not have babysitting, and many others who work in retail, at gas stations and in other jobs that require evening duty.

As in years past, voters must present themselves in person, at a specific hour, and stay for as long as two. And if this caucus is anything like previous ones, only a tiny percentage of Iowans will participate. In 2000, the last year in which both parties held caucuses, 59,000 Democrats and 87,000 Republicans voted, out of a state with 2.9 million people. In the 2004, 124,000 people turned out for the Democratic caucuses.

The rules are so demanding that even Ray Hoffman, the chair of the Iowa State Republican Party and a resident of Sioux City, cannot caucus on Thursday night, because he has to be in Des Moines on party business.

Iowans begin the presidential nomination process, making choices that can heavily influence how the race unfolds. Now some are starting to ask why the first, crucial step in the presidential nominating process is also one that discourages so many people, especially working-class ones, from participating.

“It disenfranchises certain voters or makes them make choices between putting food on the table and caucusing,” said Tom Lindsey, a high school teacher in Iowa City. He plans to attend this year, but his neighbors include a cook who cannot slip away from his restaurant job on Thursday night and a mother who must care for her autistic child.