Recent Articles

  • What is mccannta?

    mccannta is the nickname which I received while a student at Biola University. More precisely, it was my username...

    Everything You Would like to Know About 'Once'

    ...all the information on the movie 'Once,' the actors, whether they're dating, and what was said in Czech at the sea....

    Lyrics to the Songs in 'Once'

    Here are all the lyrics to this great music from Glen Hansard and Markéta Irglová from 'Once.'

    2007 Reading List

    What I read last year. What do you think? Any suggestions?

    Brothers Karamazov
    Character Summary

    ...This is a brief summary for the characters in Fyodor Dostoevsky's "The Brothers Karamazov." This list will assist readers in keeping straight on all the characters in Dostoevsky's masterpiece....

Feeds

  •      
     
     
     
     
     

Thursday, 20 November 2008

VMWare Workstation 6.5 Clustering Config

Here is my customized lines added to the .vmx file that enables two SCSI disks for use in VM Workstation 6.5 for use in clustering. I used this custom configuration to setup 2 disks for use in two VMs for testing clustering in Windows 2003 Server. Here are the added lines...

scsi1.present = "TRUE"
scsi1.virtualDev="lsilogic"

scsi1:1.present = "TRUE"
scsi1:1.fileName = "M:\vmachines\clusterdisk\clusterdisk1.vmdk"
scsi1:1.mode = "independent-persistent"
scsi1:1.shared="TRUE"
scsi1:1.redo = ""

scsi1:2.present = "TRUE"
scsi1:2.fileName = "M:\vmachines\clusterdisk\quorumdisk.vmdk"
scsi1:2.mode = "independent-persistent"
scsi1:2.shared="TRUE"
scsi1:2.redo = ""

disk.locking = "false"
diskLib.dataCacheMaxSize = "0"
diskLib.dataCacheMaxReadAheadSize = "0"
diskLib.dataCacheMinReadAheadSize = "0"
diskLib.dataCachePageSize ="4096"
diskLib.maxUnsyncedWrites = "0"

I relied heavily on the following blogs to assemble this code:

 

Tuesday, 22 July 2008

Mr No Foreign Policy Experience

Barack Obama's European and Middle East photo-op has lead me to ask myself why did Mr No Foreign Policy Experience Whatsoever bother to go to Iraq and Afghanistan when he had already decided on his Iraq strategy 5 months ago?

He should have brought John McCain along on the trip. McCain, an experienced Senator with foreign policy experience, he could have introduced BO to Gen. Petraeus, or at least picked him out in a crowd. Why will BO still not acknowledge that the surge of troops last summer has succeeded to quell sectarian violence and provide increased security and confidence in the Iraqi people that has then help foster increased strides in their struggling democracy?

If BO, or more importantly, his advisers, could step out of the D.C. beltway world-unto-itself news-cycle mentality, they would recognize that that in doing so, they could disarm McCain and his all-to-easy arguments that the first term Senator is a foreign policy newbie. By admitting what is patently apparent, he could re-take the high road politically and broaden his appeal to moderates in potential swing states.

These swing state voters, like most all voters NOT newly registered int he last 6 months, are intelligent. Using the brains God gave them, these moderates can miraculously, even without a master's in PolySci or Advanced Linear Logic, easily reconcile supporting a strategy to win a war while still wishing that same war had never happened in the first place.

Obama_helicopter_s_3

Why is this not the story coming out of BOs trip? With all the journalistic decorum of a Paris Hilton sighting, the media seems focused instead on staged handshakes and thoughtful gazes out the window of a helicopter?

Wednesday, 19 March 2008

Barack Obama's Speech on Race In America

You have probably heard something or other regarding Barack Obama's speech yesterday. I listened to it and was very surprised and pleased.

I forward this to you because I am very impressed by what I heard in this speech and want you to hear it for yourself without Anderson Cooper or Bill O'Reilly or Sean Hannity or some other soundbyte radio or tv talking head processing or digesting it for you.

I believe strongly in racial issues and am impressed by what I heard from Barack yesterday. I don't agree with everything I heard and disagree strongly with some of it but that does not disqualify or excuse such a refreshing and direct discussion of America's greatest corporate sin: slavery and its legacy of discrimination and Jim Crow marginalization.

Make no mistake, I am not endorsing Barack Obama for president. I ask you to listen not to a candidate for president but to a different sort of man with a very courageous discussion of the current state of race in this country without the typical, rubber-stamp talking point responses from purveyors of black victimization as well as 'gimmie-a-break' conservatives. This is a chance to begin a discussion about race and justice and virtue from a new starting point without the ugly partisianship and resulting ambivelence that usually follows from it.

I send this to you because I am encouraged by the straight talk and honest desire for a thoughtful reevaluation of the racial status quo in this country. Some of you will think I must be drunk to send this out or under the spell of some foreign influence. While I would never disparage the efficacious elfin magic from a bottle of Guiness, especially one bestowed so thoughtfully as it was on Monday, I declare myself free from any impairment. Any spell it cast is not at work in this plea.

You all know, and surely have many examples to offer, I can be an daft prick and may think I have questionable grounds, at best, to suggest such a strange request upon your time. No arguments there. However, I think these issues are important enough to disregard my less than stellar credability and take the time to consider these issues anew.

I am posting this same message on my blog and invite you to submit your thoughts after listening to the speech. We can begin a small dialog of our own and begin the discussion. The blog address is http://blog.mccannta.com and feel free to forward this on to as many folks as you wish. We're all friends and all care for one another so feel free to speak freely.

Here is the link to the speech:

http://my.barackobama.com/page/content/hisownwords 

Sunday, 06 January 2008

2007 Final Reading List

This was a fantastic year of reading for me. I have become fascinated by two very different authors this year and have read extensively of their work: David McCullough and Ian McEwan. I became enamored with McCullough when I purchased an abridged book on CD version of '1776' while on an extended work trip. I loved it so much I bought the book and read it cover to cover. I then followed up with the best non-fiction of 2007, John Adams. The book was so good I was depressed for a week after finishing it. I am stoked to find out that HBO is producing a 6-part mini-series on the book to air in early spring. I can't wait.

My new favorite novelist has become Ian McEwan. I usually stick with classic novels because I just love the beauty of their writing; I usually prefer to read Jane Austen or Henry James to almost anyone modern. All that changed when I was introduced to McEwan during an interview for Charlie Rose (one of the smartest people of TV). At the time, he was discussing his new novel 'On Chesil Beach' so I picked it up. It was amazing so I moved on to his others and found the best novel of 2007 (I read it this year, it's a couple of years old): Atonement. Do yourself a favor and read this book; you'll thank me.

  • AtonementATONEMENT - Ian McEwan
    This is not just another Ian McEwan novel, it is, by far, the best modern novel I have ever read. McEwan's prose is savory and sweet-it is to be relished like a fine wine. The man can describe just about anything. This novel specifically, and McEwan's writing in general, will spoil you with its quality and beauty. You may not be able to sit through another John Grisham novel again. This novel, and now a major motion picture, is just about perfect. It is complex and nuanced and compelling; it's a big story, an epic that does not disappoint in its ending. And what an ending it is. It has a fantastic ending; not one in which Bruce Willis saves the earth with a brave act of self-sacrifice (hear the music swelling?) but one in which the entire novel, all the characters and plot lines, the emotions wrenched and suspended aloft throughout the entire story come to a beautifully complete and wholly satisfying conclusion. I recommend this book to everyone. Everyone, that is, that is literate and fairly intelligent. Be advised, the story prominently features the worst curse word in the English language; it wouldn't be that same without it.
  • JOHN ADAMS - David McCullough
    While Atonement is the best novel I have read, 'John Adams' is the best non-fiction I have read this year. I am angry at my high school history teachers for not teaching me more about this paragon of American Revolutionary history. Few, if any, men have accomplished so much and played so prominent a role in the creation and formation of this wonderful country than this paragon of integrity, intelligence, honor and virtue as John Adams. That he and his awesome wife Abegail corresponded so much, and with such deep and personal revelations, make this book easily the climax of McCullough's literary career. He is such a fantastic writer that this material takes on a life of its own in a great narrative that is hard to put down. Read this book!!
  • A DAY AT THE BEACH - Helen Schulman
    I chose this book around the anniversary of 9/11 and was not disappointed. Enough time has passed and the interval has brought the beginnings of reasoned perspective on that horrible experience. Helen's book was a great reminder of the raw terror of that day as a couple and their small child witness the first World Trade Center attack from their high-rise apartment just blocks away. They flee the city to their tranquil and quiet Long Island beach house. The narrative is quick and terrifying and harried and therapeutic as well.
  • FALLING MAN - Don DeLillo
    After reading Helen Schulman's book I looked for another along the same vein and was not disappointed. This is very different from 'A Day At the Beach' but is equally chilling. The prose is experientially linked to the confusion and blur of a survivor of the Twin Towers who tries to return to daily life. 
  • MYSTERIES OF THE MIDDLE AGES: The Rise of Feminism, Science and Art from the Cuts to Catholic Europe - Thomas Cahill
    This book comes in a close second as best non-fiction book of the year. First of all, the book is absolutely beautiful. Almost every page had some decorative margin border or photograph of some medieval fresco or painting. As for the writing, Cahill is fantastic as he weaves a thoroughly compelling story of the awesome characters of the Middle Ages: Augustine, Abelard, Teresa of Avilla, Bernard, Aquinas, Heloise, ect. Within these detailed profiles, Cahill presents a clear argument for the rise of Feminism and the eventual beginnings of the Enlightenment. In the great book there is nothing Dark about that Middle ages. Excellent.
  • Undaunted_courage UNDAUNTED COURAGE - Stephen E. Ambrose
    This is a fantastic biography of Merriwether Lewis and William Clark and their Corps of Discovery that explored the Louisiana Purchase. These are two of greatest explorers and Americans to ever live. To accomplish what they accomplished when they accomplished it was an accomplishment of monumental proportions.
  • AMSTERDAM - Ian McEwan
    This brief McEwan novel is fantastic. It's witty, fast-paced, and devilishly fun. Two despicably self-absorbed former lovers of a recently deceased socialite make a solemn pact whose consequences will change their lives and possibly alter the course of political leadership in England. This novel is fun.
  • SATURDAY - Ian McEwan
    One fascinating day in the life of a successful surgeon will alter his life and that of his family. This is a quick-paced novel with a fantastic last 100 pages.
  • NAKED - David Sedaris
    Another great book by David Sedaris. A total laugh-riot. On an additional note regarding David Sedaris. Dave Gundlach's Christmas present (he's my roommate and we're not gay) was to see David Sedaris live in concert. He was hilarious and read our favorite story about the Stadium Pal. Thanks Stadium Pal!
  • THE CONTENT OF OUR CHARACTER - Shelby Steele
    This is the best book I have ever read dealing with the question of race in America. I re-read this classic for Martin Luther King's birthday.
  • A ROOM WITH A VIEW- E. M. Forester
  • Brothers_karamazov

  • THE BROTHERS KARAMAZOV - Fyodor Dostoevsky
    I am re-reading the classic Russian epic. I am reading a translation by Richard Pervear and Larissa Volokhonsky that is awesome. It is so much better than the older Constance Garrett version. This translation seems much more Russian; it has a roughness, a foreign quality that seems much more authentic, less Westernized. Follow the title link or the book image link for a hardcover version of this masterpiece of Russian literature. See my character summary when you begin reading and this study guide for more background.
  • WHITE GUILT - Shelby Steele
    The book tagline is "How Blacks and Whites Together Destroyed the Promise of the Civil Rights Era."
  • A ROOM WITH A VIEW- E. M. Forester
  • DESPAIR - Vladamir Nabakov
  • On_chesil_beachON CHESIL BEACH - Ian McEwan
    This was my initial introduction to the writing of Ian McEwan. This novella is centered around a couple's wedding night in 1962. Though the setting might seem like that of a porn movie, it is actually very good. This story is very intimate without being seedy or voyeuristic.
  • TRUMAN - David McCullough
    This was another great McCullough book. Truman was the only U.S. President to drop an Atomic Bomb in wartime. What an awesome responsibility and a decision that, while debated to this day, was sadly the best choice available. How quickly Americans forget how fanatical and evil the Japanese regime was.   
  • HOW THE IRISH SAVED CIVILIZATION - Thomas Cahill
  • THE WORST HARD TIME - Timothy Egan
    This National Book Award winner about the Dust Bowl in the 1930s is great.
  • JOHNSTOWN FLOOD - David McCullough
  • PARADISE LOST - John Milton
  • DANGEROUS NATION - Robert Kagan

Books in progress...