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On Hiatus

I am officially on vacation from my real job until next Friday and as I am taking the kids to Disney and am the sole author here at Shadowscope I won’t be posting much (if at all) here until next Thursday or Friday. Check out the crime links in my sidebar for some really cool crime sites, many of which are updated daily. We head out Friday afternoon so while I won’t promise, I may have an update or two before we leave town.

If you are one of the 12 or so people that visit my personal site I will still be posting vacation updates there and Twitter as well.

Wednesday Hero: Chief Master Sergeant Paul Wesley Airey

This Weeks Post Was Suggested By Elena

Chief Master Sergeant Paul Wesley Airey

Chief Master Sergeant Paul Wesley Airey

 
U.S. Air Force

“Chief Airey was an Airman’s Airman and one of the true pioneers for our service,” said Gen. Norton Schwartz, Air Force Chief of Staff. “He was a warrior, an innovator… and a leader with vision well ahead of his time. His legacy lives today in the truly professional enlisted force we have serving our nation… and for that we owe him a debt of gratitude.”

Chief Airey was born in Quincy, Mass., on December 13, 1923. At age eighteen, shortly after the bombing of Pearl Harbor on December, 7, 1941, Airey quit high school to enlist in the Army Air Forces on November 16, 1942. He later earned his high school equivalency certificate through off-duty study. During World War II he flew as a B-24 radio operator and additional duty aerial gunner. On his 28th mission, then-Technical Sergeant Airey and his fellow crewmen were shot down over Vienna, Austria, captured, and held prisoner by the German air force from July 1944 to May 1945. During his time as a prisoner of war he worked tirelessly to meet the basic needs of fellow prisoners, even through a 90-day forced march.

Chief Airey held the top enlisted from April 3, 1967 to July 31, 1969. During his tenure he worked to change loan establishments charging exorbitant rates outside the air base gates and to improve low retention during the Vietnam Conflict. Chief Airey also led a team that laid the foundation for the Weighted Airman Promotion System, a system that has stood the test of time and which is still in use today. He also advocated for an Air Force-level Senior Noncommissioned Officer Academy. His vision became reality when the academy opened in 1973, becoming the capstone in the development of Air Force Senior NCOs. Chief Airey retired August 1, 1970. He continued advocating for Airmen’s rights by serving on the boards of numerous Air Force and enlisted professional military organizations throughout the years. He was a member of the Board of Trustees for the Airmen Memorial Museum, a member of the Air Force Memorial Foundation and the Air University Foundation.

On the north wall of the Air Force Memorial in Washington D.C., Chief Airey’s thoughts on Airmen are immortalized, “When I think of the enlisted force, I see dedication, determination, loyalty and valor.” The Air Force Association honored Airey with its Lifetime Achievement Award in 2007.

Chief Airey passed away on March 11, 2009 at his home in Panama City, Florida



These brave men and women sacrifice so much in their lives so that others may enjoy the freedoms we get to enjoy everyday. For that, I am proud to call them Hero.
We Should Not Only Mourn These Men And Women Who Died, We Should Also Thank God That Such People Lived

This post is part of the Wednesday Hero Blogroll. For more information about Wednesday Hero, or if you would like to post it on your site, you can go here.

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The Trouble With Twitter…

When Twitter first started up I thought it was a pretty stupid fucking idea. I tried it out and didn’t use it very long but then for some reason I picked it back up and while not quite an addict I am ‘on’ Twitter quite often. My blog posts are broadcast on Twitter as well as other random bullshit. At worst it’s a time waster and at best I use it to chat with other folks, not quite in real time but almost.

I came across this video earlier over at PhillyD.tv and it’s fucking hilarious. Check it out…

Internet Explorer 8

    So Microsoft has released IE8. I ran it for a while during it's beta phase, prior to my computer biting the dust but just have not cared enough to reinstall it on my new laptop. I just don't really care. It doesn't seem to offer me anything that would get me to switch from using Flock.

I’m sure I will eventually install it, if only to test my crime site when I finish rebuilding it, but for now I’ll stick with what I have. Anyone else running it yet? Pros or cons?

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Site Updates

Over the next couple of weeks I will be redoing the entire site. The end result will make for easier commenting, profiles, actions streams and the ability to sign up and write articles to submit should you wish to do so. There won’t be any noticeable changes until it’s complete as I am going to set up a completely new server for it. What may be noticeable is that I will probably only put a post up every couple of days until that time while I am busy setting up the new site. Once I finish I will migrate all of my posts over to the new site and just redirect the URL to it so that everything will be seamless on the front end.

We’ll still be using Movabletype, but the newest version along with user profiles and the Motion plugin. This will allow me to integrate the login process with Facebook as well as several other services. I am also considering setting up a forum as well. Any suggestions are welcome while I am working on it. Also, if you have any article suggestions you want to see written, please feel free to send ’em my way.

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Kontera

At one point in time I was running Amazon context links here but ditched them about a year and a half ago, mainly because most of the paid review companies don’t allow them. Since it’s been well over a year since I’ve done any paid posting here at Shadowscope I have re-implemented context links, using Kontera. For some reason they aren’t showing up on the main page, only in the entries themselves, which is fine right now. You’ll notice them by the double lines under the link, rather than the normal link with no line that I use. It all helps to pay for the hosting.

Now if I can just figured out why the heck it won’t work on the main index. Something to do with pagination I think, since that is no longer working either…

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New Storm OS Leak: 4.7.0.114

    <div class="zemanta-img" style="margin: 1em; float: left; display: block; width: 97px;"><a href="http://www.daylife.com/image/03lMfuV7Iqd0o?utm_source=zemanta&amp;utm_medium=p&amp;utm_content=03lMfuV7Iqd0o&amp;utm_campaign=z1"><img src="http://cache.daylife.com/imageserve/03lMfuV7Iqd0o/87x150.jpg" alt="UNDATED - This handout image supplied by Veriz..." style="border: medium none ; display: block;" width="87" height="150" /></a><p class="zemanta-img-attribution" style="font-size: 0.8em;">Image by <a href="http://www.daylife.com/source/Getty_Images">Getty Images</a> via <a href="http://www.daylife.com/">Daylife</a></p></div>OS 4.7.0.114 for the Blackberry Storm has been released into the wild. Before you head over looking for links to download bear in mind that this is a beta release and can hose your storm and turn it into a brick if you screw it up.

That having been said I am currently running version .103 right now, the last official Verizon release being .75. I tend to wait a while myself and let everyone else find all of the bugs before I upgrade myself simply because my phone also doubles as my home and business line and I don’t need a non-working device if the bugs are too ugly.

If you are still interested, head over to the CrackBerry forums where you can find more information.

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Site Maintenance

I’ve exported around a thousand more posts that don’t have anything to do with the subjects at hand and moved them over to my personal site. Still have a long way to go. Once I get to where it’s just the crime blog entries left I will rebuild the templates, which will make it easier to comment and log in. That may take a bit being as how I only seem to have time to work on the site once or twice a month.

New Game for the Storm – Crackberry Smash

    It's been quite some time since I posted over here. I've been putting all of my energy into my crime blog and now it's time to rectify that. I will attempt to start posting here at least once a day. Anyone else interested in helping out is is more than welcome to shoot me an email to rm_blogger@yahoo.com as well.

Anyhow, on to the post. Once of the places I’ve been hanging out at online since picking up my Blackberry Storm back in December is CrackBerry, and one of the folks over there has released a fun ‘game’ for the Blackberry entitled Crackberry Smash. Check out the video after the break…

Head over to CrackBerry and download it now.

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Wednesday Hero

Spc. Brian K. Baker

Spc. Brian K. Baker
27 years old from West Seneca, New York
2nd Battalion, 14th Infantry

Regiment, 10th Mountain Division (Light Infantry)
November 07, 2004

 U.S. Army

Near his hometown, the flag flew at half-staff outside the East Concord Volunteer Fire Department where Baker had been a junior firefighter. He joined the Army shortly after graduating from Springville-Griffith Institute in 1996 with the goal of making it his career, friends said.

“You might say it was his calling,” said Lori Ploetz, a longtime family friend. “He was great at what he did. He was respected by his peers.”

Spc. Brian Baker was killed when a vehicle-borne IED detonated near his security patrol in Baghdad. He leaves behind his parents, his wife, Amy, and two daughters who were born after his death.



All Information Was Found On And Copied From MilitaryCity.com

These brave men and women sacrifice so much in their lives so that others may enjoy the freedoms we get to enjoy everyday. For that, I am proud to call them Hero.
We Should Not Only Mourn These Men And Women Who Died, We Should Also Thank God That Such People Lived

This post is part of the Wednesday Hero Blogroll. For more information about Wednesday Hero, or if you would like to post it on your site, you can go here.

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