Baby Breeding Blog

Hey Folks,

Just wanted to update you and let you know that the first pictures of “Baby Breeding” are on-line at:
http://www.nealbreeding.com/photos/baby/

We are calling him “Baby Breeding” for now, since we haven’t decided on a name yet, although we have had a few suggestions… my brother… “Clint Alan” thought it would be a great name… regardless of the sex…. My dad just wants part of the name to be “Finally” as in “finally I’m going to be a grandfather at 65 years of living!”

Jennifer is doing well with the pregnancy, it is just sinus stuff that has her not feeling 100% right now, she also has a really busy schedule, she is taking two night classes and teaching 4 year olds on Wednesdays at church, at least for the rest of this Quarter (which is almost over).

Have a great week!

Neal

Lightning Strikes!

We had an interesting Friday night… mom was in town for the weekend, so after we ate, came back to the house and were sitting around in the kitchen at the Bar talking and watching and listening to the thunderstorm.


BAM! Ok, so that isn’t the picture above, but it looked like that, ok, maybe not, but we did see the bolt come down this pine tree in the front yard and hit the ground and bust into a ball of flames!

Shortly after it happen, I went to the sink to wash something and we had NO water pressure… then I remembered, “the main (neighborhood’s) water line runs right by that tree.

When it stopped raining and storming enough that Jennifer would let me out of the house, I drover HER truck to the end of the driveway and with HER flashlight (what is it with her having a cooler vehicle and better tools than me? Guess it should be that way, huh), anyway, what I saw was a bubbling up from the ground, like you see at the start of the Beverly Hillbillies — except it was water, not oil.

So you think you have a Virus?

If you Anti-virus software has told you that you have a virus, but you want to double check, here are a few things you can do.

1) Try a few on-line virus testers. Most of them require accessing them through Internet Explorer. Here are a few links to some that I use:

http://housecall.antivirus.com
http://security.symantec.com
http://www3.ca.com/virusinfo/virusscan.aspx

2) Make sure your AV software is up to date. Some times there can be a “false” positive, meaning it isn’t actually a virus, but a file that is being misreported as a virus.

3) If you use AVG for your virus scan program, go to: http://www.grisoft.com/doc/Virus+Encyclopaedia/lng/us/tpl/tpl01 or under the “About Viruses” section, look for the Virus Encyclopedia. If you don’t find your virus there, it could be that it is part of a “spyware” program that has been installed on your computer.

If it appears this is the case, try one of the on-line virus scanners (listed in #1) to see if it will find it as a virus.

If this doesn’t work, then Google the filename of the “reported” virus and see if you can find out what program may have installed it. Then try to uninstall the program. It is a good idea to Google “uninstalling [insert name of program here]” to see if you can find detailed directions on how to uninstall it. Most spyware does not uninstall correctly from just the Add/Remove programs.

4) Delete your Temporary Internet files and temp folders and run the scan again.
Temp folders are usually located at c:\windows\temp
There may also be another one at: C:\Documents and Settings\[insert your username\\Local Settings\Temp.

Delete your temporary Internet files by loading your web browser, going under Tools, then Usually Options, the “delete internet files” or “cache.” Still having problems find it, Google “how do I delete my temp internet files in internet explorer or firefox”

5) Re-run the scan. If the “infected” files still show up, after you have uninstalled the program. You can try and just delete them. Go to my computer, browse to the drive and folder where the file is, select it, hit the delete button. warning: Deleting a file if the program has not been uninstalled could make your computer unstable. So make sure you have tried to uninstall it through the Add/Remove programs.

6) A last option that I recommend, but can be a bit technical, is to run HiJackThis.

Go to http://hijackthis.de and run click on the Direct download link. Download the file to your desktop, uncompress it (you may have to double click on it, then drag the hijackthis file to your desktop). Then run the program by double clicking on it.

Select “Do a System Scan and Save a Log file” Notepad will open up and appear to have a lot of lines of text in it. Click Edit and Select all, then, Edit and select copy

Next, go to http://hijackthis.de in the web browser and click in the text box “You can paste a logfile in this textbox” and paste the information that was copied from Notepad.

Click the Analyze button and look at the results.

I would Google “how to use hijackthis” and read up on it before trying to use it. Be warned you can really make your system unstable if you remove the wrong thing.

Good Luck!

Added on 4/27/2009:

Lifehacker recently posted an article with the 5 most popular Malware removal pprogram.  Here is the link:

http://lifehacker.com/tag/hive-five/?skyline=true&s=t


Search Engines & Meta Tags

In the early days of the Internet, many search engines used Meta tags to know what content a web site contained.

Meta Tag (defination) are as important as they were in the early days of the Internet. “In the early 2000s, search engines have veered away from reliance on meta tags since many web sites used inappropriate meta keywords or a technique known as keyword stuffing, in order to increase their search engine ranking.

Some search engines still take meta tags into consideration when delivering results, though most of the major search engines ignore them.” (wikipedia.org)

Example
Here is an example of what a newspaper could use for tags: Description Tags: Local news, obituaries, sports, opinion, classifieds, career builder, cars.com, and community information from the ‘city’ paper

Keywords: newspaper’s name, [website url], city, state, careers, Classifieds, Jobs

Search Engine Submissions
Google has agreements with Yahoo! Directory and/or Open Directory Project index, which is owned by Netscape to include the sites indexed in their directories in the Google index.

Sites can be submited to Yahoo! Directory by clicking on the Suggest a Site link on their site.

Sites can be submitted to the Open Directory project by clicking on the link Suggest URL on their site.

If a site is added above, there is no reason to add it to Google, since Google pulls from those directories. However, sites can be added to Google by going to http://www.google.com/submit_content.html

Search Engine Optimization (SEO)
http://www.google.com/support/webmasters/bin/answer.py?answer=35291

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Note: Most of this information was found at wikipedia.org.


What Web Users Hate about Web Sites

I recently ran across an article on InfoWorld.com that sumerized the top 5 quirks that web surfer’s hate most about web sites. Spending a large portion of my life on the web, I agreed with all of these and was glad to know that I was not alone.

The top five Web site quirks that users hate the most, according to iFocus are:

1. Invasive advertising: Cunnington says users widely despise ads that cover content, ads that flash wildly and ads that chew broadband.

2. Re-inventing the wheel: people do not want to have to learn how to use a site before they can browse it, Cunnington said.

3. ‘Leap of faith’ links: that means disclosing information on content and file size.

4. Attention-deficit Web sites: “Users have a special hatred of flashing icons and banners, because they draw the eye away from what is important and hinder their progress,” Cunnington said.

5. War and Peace length: “A common mistake in Web design is to just [convert] a brochure to the Web. But the Web is its own medium, and communication has to change to reach users. Users are known to read 25 percent slower on the screen than on paper, read fewer words and don’t like long pages which require scrolling down,” she said. Another problem is site blindness. “We are now seeing right-column blindness, where users do not see information and links down the right hand side of the screen. This occurs because the right hand column has become known for advertising,” Cunnington said.