Are Anti-Voucher Advocates Illegally Using Utah School Resources? [UPDATED]

As many of you know, a political battle is raging in Utah this fall over the issue of School Vouchers. Oak Norton, who has been a prominent thorn in the side of the local school system for some time now, has evidence suggesting that individuals may have been illegally using their positions within School Districts, and District resources available to them, to push their Anti-Voucher agenda.

In an anti-voucher PowerPoint presentation he acquired, Oak uncovered given to Oak by a nameless source, the the following incriminating meta-data was noticed:

Created: Tuesday, July 31, 2007 9:08 PM
Modified: Friday, October 12, 2007 10:13 AM
Last saved by: Cache County School District
Revision number: 30
Total editing time: 689 Minutes

Here is the screenshot:

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Paper Prototyping & The Best Geek Comment Ever

I apologize for two tech related posts in a row, but this was just too good to not share.

I was reading an interesting article on a usability design method they call “Paper Prototyping” and the first comment on the article was pure geek gold. In order to truly appreciate it let me give you the context first.

Paper Prototyping is a inexpensive, low-tech method of brainstorming, or of testing the usability of proposed designs for a software interface. Basically, you print out the various aspects of the proposed user interface on paper or cards. You cut out individual elements of the interface design with a pair of scissors if necessary. Then you sit down with the end user and you take the place of the computer. The user then interacts with the paper prototype, and you show them what would happen by laying down different sections to show how the interface changes and displays data.

So here is the golden comment by one Mantari Damacy:

It is like a role playing game, except, for using a computer!

PLAYER: “Okay, I save my file.”

GM: [dice clatters, looks up chart] Okay, you try to save your file, A new window pops up on the screen that indicates a general I/O error, but gives no specific details.

PLAYER: “Oh no! I open up the case, and pull the boot disc off of the IDE controller!”

GM: Okay. [dice clatters] Well, you manage to open up the case without tripping the power, but you’re not familiar with the internal workings of this machine. You can’t locate any IDE drives…

Awesome! I can just imagine a prototyping session ending with the following exchange between the designer and user:

“Sinus supremus!”
“Zero charisma!”
“Sinus supremus!”
“Zero charisma!”

😉

See the original article

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PHP Bug: The magic __call method and overriding methods in child classes

This article is about a technical aspect of computer programming and since I know that many of my readers are not computer programmers, and of those that are, many do not program in PHP, you may safely ignore it unless it interests you.

As I’ve been working on a light-weight data access layer for PHP5.1+ that I hope to release as open source in the near future, I have discovered an annoying design flaw in PHP.

Support for a more object-oriented approach to programming has been greatly improved since the introduction of PHP5. PHP also offers some magic methods that can be used to simulate properties and methods without having to actually declare them individually. These are great for implementing on the fly methods and properties.

But these magic “overloading” methods don’t function exactly as expected when it comes to inherited child classes.

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LDS General Conference October 2007 – MP3s, Streaming Video, and Podcast

[Looking for October 2008 General Conference? Go here.]

[Looking for the October 2009 Conference, go here]

UPDATE: MP3s of most sessions, as wells as MP3s of each individual discourse in the sessions are now available from the official church website.

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Once again we are enjoying the General Conference of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Each conference, I try to post links to MP3 audio and other resources as quickly as they become available. Not everyone can listen to or watch the conference as it is broadcast, but internet technology has progressed to the point that anyone can participate and listen to the words of the living Prophet, Twelve Apostles, and other general authorities of the church regardless of their schedule.

MP3 Audio

The links below are to the earliest available MP3 Audio files. They are often available shortly after each session ends through the podcast. As MP3 files are made available on the official church website, the links will be changed to point there.

Saturday Morning Session

Saturday Morning Part 1 – MP3 Audio File (24 Mb)
Saturday Morning Part 2 – MP3 Audio File (24 Mb)

Saturday Afternoon Session

Saturday Afternoon Part 1 – MP3 Audio File (24 Mb)
Saturday Afternoon Part 2 – MP3 Audio File (24 Mb)

Sunday Morning Session

Sunday Morning Part 1 – MP3 Audio File (24 Mb)
Sunday Morning Part 2 – MP3 Audio File (24 Mb)

Sunday Afternoon Session

Sunday Afternoon Part 1 – MP3 Audio File (24 Mb)
Sunday Afternoon Part 2 – MP3 Audio File (24 Mb)

Video

Streaming Video at byu.tv (Spanish, Portuguese)
Streaming Video at KSL

Video is available both live as the conference is broadcast as well as on demand for past sessions, which are available immediately. So you can literally watch them at any time. This is the way we are watching conference this year. Our first time watching this way was last April, and we experienced some technical bugs, but this fall the experience has been, so far, bug-free.

Podcast

October 2007 LDS General Conference Podcast from KSL. Subscribe with iTunes, another podcatcher, or even Google Reader and listen at your leisure or on your iPod.

Enjoy!

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