IE 7 Upgrade

Well, the WordPress upgrade seems to have gone okay. At the urging of Microsoft (via those urgent little popup messages about important updates that need to be installed) I finally relented and upgraded from IE 6 to IE 7. Overall, I have to say IE 7 is somewhat of an improvement. The tabs are nice; since I’m used to them from mostly using Firefox and whenever I’d use IE 6 for something I’d be looking for tabs a couple seconds before remembering IE 6 didn’t have any. But, I’ve just noticed that IE 7 has a problem displaying my “logo” image in the head of the blog. It shows a smidgen of the top of it, leaving one to wonder (if one didn’t know from previous visits) what it’s supposed to be. Not sure how to fix it. Firefox has a nice developer toolbar that lets you play with CSS in “real time”; great for debugging CSS oddities. IE 7, naturally, has no such plug-in. That I know of. All I know is, this little display anomaly only appears in IE 7; IE 6 had no such problem, Firefox doesn’t. This is interesting: AvantBrowser has the problem on the PC with IE 7 but the same version AvantBrowser doesn’t have the problem on the PC with IE 6. Oh, yeah, this is gonna take some thought. :scratchin:

Blog Upgrade

One of the things about having a blog is maintaining it. One of the things about maintaining it is upgrading it when the program developers come out with a new release. So, I’ve just installed the latest WordPress release. I used to get a certain satisfaction from accomplishing such a feat. Now, it’s mostly just a chore. On the other hand, since this blog has virtually no readers other than myself, there’s little reason to do this sort of thing if not the satisfaction of just being able to do it. Yeah. I guess that’s right. :cool2:

Invest in Oil Wells

The prolonged reporting in the mass media about “high” oil prices has prompted large numbers of people to consider investing in oil ventures, and the vultures are feasting again. We saw a lot of investor money disappear down the holes back in the 80’s, and it’s made a comeback. Back then both the honest and dishonest promoters had a number of tax advantages to talk about. Even without tax shelter sugar, though, it seems folks are still willing to hand large sums of money over to people they don’t know for projects they know nothing about. The crooks haven’t even bothered to come up with new offering materials. Many of the “private placement memorandums” (yeah, I know, it’s “memoranda” plural but it just don’t sound right) are word for word the same as 20 years ago. What amazes me is that even with the capabilities offered by today’s computers, many of them still look like they came from manual typewriters, lacking the snazzy graphics that are so easy to produce these days. Yet, it would appear they’re no less effective. Maybe it’s reverse psychology which, frankly, always was a promoter’s most effective tool (though many didn’t actually realize it). There’s nothing like telling a guy with an inflated ego that this is REALLY REALLY RISKY that’ll work faster to part him from his money, especially when coupled with the magic word: OIL. He can hardly wait to tell his buddies in the clubhouse after a round of golf about his oil wells. In a way, it’s hard to feel sorry for them sometimes. Trouble is, it makes life that much more difficult for the real oilmen who are, in fact, prospecting for oil, not just prospecting for easy money.

So, it occurs to me I ought to write about how to tell the difference between a legitimate drilling program and a paper drilling program. Problem is my lack of time, as evident from the lapses thereof between my articles here. Fortunately, there are other places to find this information, and I’ll try to mention a few in the next article, whenever I find time to write it. For those who can’t wait, however, just Google “invest in oil wells” (without the quotes). Seriously, it’s a terrific eclectic themed adventure with stops you’d never have expected.