15 January 2011

UofL's epic win against Marquette

With 6.5 minutes to go in today's UofL basketball game against Marquette, I had thrown in the towel. I'd seen this story many times before. I sent a text message to Noelle and told her it was over. Then Van Treese got a steal and dunk. Preston Knowles decided that the rim was no longer too small and started draining 3-pointers and I sent 4 or 5 more text messages to Noelle (because she was at a party and would be interested in these turn of events.) As it turns out, the response I got (That's nice, but UK is better) was not really what I expected from her. I was sending these messages to my nephew, Austin. Oops. So, instead, I called and told Noelle the final events of the game. What was it? With 12.2 seconds left, UofL's Preston Knowles got the ball, drove the lane, jumped to shoot; but, being triple defended, dished the ball to an open Kyle Kuric who scored a ring around the basket. UofL leads by 1, 71-70, with 4.0 seconds left. Marquette failed to score and UofL capped, what columnists are writing, a furious win.

Coach Pitino, in his post-game interview, called it a top 5 comeback win. Of course, we all know about UK's epic win over LSU in 1994. UK was down by 31 points with 16 minutes left in the game. UK turned on their A-game and outscored the Tigers 62-27 to win the game 99-95.

This got me thinking. UK's win is epic. It is still talked about in Kentucky. But how do these two games compare? Coach Pitino gets to notch his cap with another epic comeback win, sure, but if we analyze the numbers which is the greater comeback? UK allowed LSU to score 27 points in the final 16 minutes, UofL held Marquette to 7 points in the final 5. minutes. That's 1 point every 35.6 seconds in UK v LSU compared to 1 point every 55.7 seconds in the UofL v Marq. Advantage UofL defense. On offense, UK scored 62 points in the final 16 minutes, or 1 point every 15.5 seconds. UofL scored 24 points in the final 5.2 minutes, or 1 point every 14.8 seconds. Advantage UofL offense. (Originally, I started counting at 6.5 minutes with Van Treese's steal and UofL scoring 26 points. That's 1 point every 15 seconds. But UofL was still down 18 with 5.2 minutes left.)

In other areas, LSU lost their point guard and missed free throws. Marquette had UofL in foul trouble the whole game, but couldn't capitalize on it during the end. They also missed an important free throw series, scoring 1 of 2. I give the advantage to UofL on this, they were in foul trouble and were battling the full force of Marquette.

In both cases, the game came down to the last seconds. LSU made an errant baseball type inbound pass that was picked off and UofL was able to trouble Marquette's lane running shooter enough that his shot was short. Both of these games were won by the same coach using similar tactics: pounding defense and tenacious pressing. It helped that the players started knocking down shots.

Being down by 31 points with 16 minutes left is usually a time when a coach or team throws in the towel and says, "Here's a practice game, let's make the best of it," UK didn't do that. Being down 18 points with 6.5 minutes left caused a large number of UofL fans to head to the door.

UK's 1994 win over LSU is totally epic, but I think Pitino is right, today's UofL win over Marquette should stand as a top 5 comeback win in NCAA Men's Basketball - it may even be a bigger win than the UK game. The raw analytical numbers bear it out.

26 December 2010

Christmas Light Hero

Some people have too much time and or money... But sometimes they create Epic Wins!

08 November 2010

Ubuntu LINUX! Yeah!


Okay, so I've been threatening to move my main computer to linux, Ubuntu specifically, for a very long time. A very, very long time. The problem was that Windows XP is a decent operating system. Sure it has its problems. It's totally and completely insecure by itself. Microsoft claims we can't pay them enough to not release a buggy operating system. Despite all that, most software developers, specifically game manufacturers and hardware manufacturers, develop their software exclusively for the Windows operating systems. Times are changing.

When Windows Vista arrived, people took a look at it. Due to a myriad of troubles, a lot of it Microsoft, but some of it due to computer vendors (Dell, HP, Compaq, Gateway, Sony, IBM, etc) the personal computer experience was abysmal. People started to look elsewhere. Most went to Apple. (WHAT are they thinking?! ... I'll leave that rant for another post.)

Anyway, due to mostly technical reasons and not liking being treated as the criminal, I vowed never to upgrade past Windows XP. Windows 7 has nearly made me change my mind. Microsoft has made a very good operating system with Windows 7. Still, I and the general consumer are not Microsoft's customer. (Another topic and rant.)

Recently, my computer hard drive crashed. I thought of all sorts of hardware reasons as to why this might be, but I've finally figured it out... the part of the hard drive that stores critical boot information became corrupted. Everything I've tried has failed to restore it. Only just today have I been able to reliably access and retrieve my files.

But because of this hard drive failure, it has forced me to decide whether to reinstall Windows XP, spend $150 to upgrade to a Windows 7 (64-bit), or go Linux, I've decided I will make the plunge. Ubuntu, here I come!

I tell you what, this switch, while it has its problems, has been very, very nice. Canonical (the company the maintains the Ubuntu distribution of Debian Linux) has made the switch fairly seamless for the Windows users with their latest Ubuntu 10.10 release, Maverick Meerkat. Installation was a breeze and convenient. Absolutely any type of software I want to use is easily obtainable. Just use the Synaptics Package Manager to find the application you want, put a check mark on it, and click apply. It downloads the necessary files, installs the application, and places a link in the Applications toolbar (like the Start menu).

Much of the software you see on my sidebar started its life in the Linux world. OpenOffice.org (soon to be LibreOffice) is preloaded on the computer. It comes with a decent e-mail, instant messenger, news reader application in Evolution. I switched it out for Thunderbird (easy, easy). Firefox is preloaded, I just grabbed my add-ons and was off and running.

Oh, what about those games one might ask... Well, certainly the mainstream gaming applications (World of Warcraft, Half-Life, Oblivion, a bunch of others I had loaded on my computer). Well, there is an application called WINE (Windows Is Not Emulated). Long story behind the name, which included several lawsuits. But essentially, it allows a Linux based computer to load Windows specific applications on the computer and the application will barely know the difference.

One of the problems with the Linux world is that there devotees are sometimes very fanatical in their approach to software. For example, some in the Linux world are upset that Ubuntu will allow people to load "closed source" software on their systems. While I prefer open source software, I will use whatever works. What's the point of all this? Adobe has dragged its feet for a very long time in making Flash work with Linux. Shortly after the Windows Vista debacle, they finally did it. Partly because, ooh!, the MacOS is somewhat Linux based. (Yes, I know it is BSD... I'm trying not to confuse everyone.) Also, more people were jumping to the Linux bandwagon (who wants to spend a 20% markup on hardware and be limited to just one source for more hardware and software on the Apple side of things). Finally, Redhat, Canonical, and Novell were all putting their weight on Adobe to finally release a working Flash application... and so they did. I have no trouble playing flash games watching youtube or hulu videos, etc.

The one problem I have... and this is rather disappointing, Netflix streaming will not work with Linux. Netflix has decided they will use Microsoft's Silverlight code. Silverlight is like Adobe Flash. It's like comparing a Toyota with a Ford. They're both cars, but a Toyota will have its light knob placed in a different spot than a Ford. I was going to say it doesn't work with Macintosh, but I suppose they did. Upon further reading it's all about the DRM (Digital Restrictions Management) OK OK it's Digital Rights Management... certainly not my right to consume the product for which I paid, though. (see my other rants on DRM.) Using a virtual machine (VirtualBox or VMWare Player), I will be able to use Netflix... but that will be a bit of a pain. (I've got to load Windows XP, ensure all software is up-to-date, ensure security software is proper, etc.)

So, I'm about 6 hours into total Ubuntu Linux immersion and I am liking it. ... I've just spent 3 hours of not playing games to type up this post ... The installation was extremely fast (20 minutes) and I was able to browse the Internet at the same time it was installing! (Take that Microsoft and your 1 hour install time with nothing to do but leave the computer, and then it is 1.5 hours minimum of updates and at least 3 reboots).

For those of you who think I'm taking the easy way out with Ubuntu... know that I have installed Gentoo Linux on a computer. That was several days worth of frustration because you are literally building your computer from scratch and compiling everything. (I spent a good 30+ hours on the thing, learning a whole lot, but not even ending up with a usable windows manager.) While this is a good exercise for learning, I don't have that time at the moment. Just a couple of hours a night after the girls go to bed. Don't, ya'll worry, I'll be knee deep in config files and the terminal before too long. I've got to get OpenSSH working without passwords, figure out why my Samba shares aren't working properly, and get VNC up and running (and preferably through the SSH tunnel).

How's that for an updated blog post?

On my TODO list:
* Figure out why Quicken 2008 is failing in Wine.
* Determine if I should bag it and install Windows XP in VirtualBox and run Quicken from that
* Decide if I want to spend $30 and get Moneydance to replace Quicken as my financial tracking software.
* Get MythTV working on the computer connected to the TV (mythbox)
* Get the mythbox connected to the TV, Internet, and configure MythTV software
* Configure the TV capture card in mythbox
* Get VirtualBox running on mythbox with Windows XP so Netflix can be utilized.
* Find a video editor suite or see if I can't get Video Studio working in Linux.

28 September 2010

Down Syndrome and Football Touchdown

So here's a video of a high school football game with an amazing touchdown by a kid with DS. (Okay, so it's not that amazing, but it is really, really cool.) The story is on FoxNews.

Watch the high def version here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jb_4f5nXZdA

23 September 2010

OK Go

There's this group that decided they'd do a music video. The catch was, they'd do it all in one take. No cutting, stopping, splicing, etc. I think their first video used only one camera. Others mimicked it, and some did a really good job (utilizing more than one camera, but the motion was non-stop and in one take).

Well, this group, OK GO, has come out with a new one. It's heavy on the adopt a dog propaganda, but the dogs are CUTE!