hittingthesweetspot

Archive for March, 2013|Monthly archive page

Food, friends and zombies go better with beer

In Uncategorized on March 30, 2013 at 2:51 pm
Beer taps in a pub in London, UK.

Beer taps in a pub in London, UK. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

We live in fantastic beer-drinking times.

There are more craft beers available than ever before and this is a good thing for those who enjoy their barley pop.

These days beer drinkers are not whom you’d think they are. Beer drinkers encompass all walks of life. I feel if walking dead from the zombie apocalypse were accurately portrayed on TV’s hugely popular Walking Dead series, they’d be beer drinkers, too (just think of the story-line possibilities and how the ratings would soar through the roof).

If we haven’t already, perhaps we’ll see beer-drinking zombies in future shows (note to Walking Dead creators—click on my “CONTACT US” link at the top of bobskelley.com and hit me up for some original, zombie beer-drinking character script ideas. Here’s one you can run with to get you started—you know how you kill zombies with a bullet to the head? Well, the beer drinking zombies will just smile at you with what remains of their faces when you try that).

Speaking of beer-drinking zombies

Some of the most prolific beer drinkers around remain professional athletes. I guess that hasn’t changed much; just the quality of the beers consumed has.

And therein lies the rub.

Domestic beer consumption has been flat (pun very much intended) for quite a while now, although you wouldn’t know it by the amount of commercials for Bud, Coors and Miller products we are bombarded with while watching the NCAA basketball tournament. These days, veteran and newbie beer drinkers alike are like kids in candy stores when it comes to their beer choices, and, this is how it should be.

A Kranz (wreath) of Kölsch beer.

A Kranz (wreath) of Kölsch beer. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Hearty craft beers on tap in your favorite pubs and restaurants can accentuate the overall dining experience.

It is really worth a few minutes of extra time to both peruse the menu of draft beer available as well as ask your server for suggestions and information. And although I’ve seen the t-shirts that read, “Beer is food,” it really is not. As such, we should not substitute copious numbers of brewskis in lieu of healthy eating.

As a lager lover, I was originally disappointed that the good majority of craft beers available had been ales. I’ve been pleased in recent times, however, to see lagers make their way to the overall beer selection rotation available, in my local establishments.

When I left Colorado it was the number one microbrewery state in the country. Maybe it still is. It sure was fun to tour the different tap rooms available that made this state with the active lifestyle, just a little less active (while enjoying some of the fine grog).

Beer drinking should be a social experience, and the way taprooms I visited in Colorado were set up, it absolutely was. Everyone in attendance at these establishments was friendly, representing the beer-drinking community quite well (ooh just thought that a zombie-themed tap room might add to that sense of community, hmm—c’mon Louisville, KY brew pubs, you should run with this one).

If all you are going to do this Saturday afternoon is meet up with some friends and have a couple of beers, consider adding some beer cheese to your get together, too.

I never had beer cheese until I came to Louisville. It’s melted cheese with some kind of bread—typically of a soft pretzel-like consistency. It has similar beer-absorbing properties akin to pizza, too, just not as elaborate as say, a meat-lovers pie with double-thick crust.

An order or two of beer cheese is also great for those awkward moments of silence that can sometimes happen during a conversation.

After taking a bite of bread and cheese, your reinvigorated taste buds will usually prompt a return to discussion of some kind.

Did you watch any of last week’s Walking Dead marathon?”

“Yeah, I did!”

Can we get another round, please?”

 

Business as usual: Insurance companies still dictate health care

In Uncategorized on March 24, 2013 at 10:48 am

Friday was a particularly frustrating day for Jim as he sought to conduct some long overdue business with the eye doctor and orthodontist.

Jim has been carrying COBRA these last several months as he continues shopping around for less costly alternatives.

Those of you with good (and I use that term lightly as the long-term recent trend with employer-provided insurance is for employees to pick up increasing shares of health care tabs while receiving less coverage) employer-provided health insurance will probably not be interested in the rest of this story, but you should.

You never know what kind of curve balls life may throw you—this includes unexpected health care emergencies that may run in the tens of thousands of dollars or more. And unless you are a member of Congress, you will have to pick up some of the tab.

COBRA is an expensive insurance safety net typically available for 18 months once an individual is separated from an employer.

I once used it but as the cost was so prohibitive (you basically are paying the full premium that your employer previously absorbed the bulk of), I ditched it as soon as I found another job with medical insurance benefits.

A friend of mine has never carried health insurance. He has paid for medical, dental and vision services, as he’s needed them. Fortunately for him, he has been a healthy guy throughout his life. This is not the route I would recommend the average person take, however, as you are gambling you will not need an expensive medical procedure that can break you financially.

Are you feeling lucky? Then roll the dice and don’t carry medical insurance. But, feeling lucky or not, it really is a must to have.

Jim arrived at the eye doctor for his appointment, filled out some paperwork, returned it to the front desk person and a few minutes later was rejected for coverage for failure to pay his premium.

Problem was, Jim was fully up to date with his premiums, but his COBRA insurer administrator had neglected to pay the separate premium component to his vision insurance provider.

There was nothing the eye doctor office people could do…did Jim want to be seen? Of course he did, but not if he was going to be held financially responsible for the entire visit.

Jim took matters into his own hands, as that was his only choice. He called his COBRA provider and was told it would take a few days to get him in the system for his vision insurance provider to recognize him as benefits-eligible. Understandably, Jim thought this unacceptable. He proceeded to call his vision insurance provider who told him they could not pay for his visit as he is shown as not having coverage (in their system).

Jim asked if the vision insurance person could call the COBRA provider and try to work it out so he could be seen.

The eye doctor was going to try to work him back into the schedule once they received a confirmation number from the vision insurance folks that his visit would be covered.

The vision insurance person asked for the COBRA provider’s customer service number. Jim gave them the number. They put him on hold and began the back and forth, over-the-phone process of straightening out the error in record keeping that was preventing him from seeing the eye doctor.

Jim got off the phone 75 minutes later, his ears red, blood pressure elevated, and was seen by the eye doctor. He spent a total of four hours at the eye doctor’s office that day. The actual doctor visit and exam took 15 minutes.

He barely made it in time to his dental appointment afterwards where, adding insult to injury, he underwent an unexpected root canal.

The good news was that the dentist’s office verified in advance that he was covered insurance-wise.

The bad news was next morning at breakfast–Jim’s crown that was drilled down into for the root canal, came completely off.

His portion for the root canal came in at just under $200, even with dental insurance.

Now he needs a new crown, too, and the dental insurance won’t be paying much if any of the bill, as his annual $1,200 benefit is mostly used up.

Jim’s monthly COBRA premiums are running what he’d pay for a one-bedroom apartment in the town he lives in.

He is having problems finding other insurance, as many insurers still will not provide coverage until a person pays premiums for an extended period, before coverage for pre-existing conditions kicks in.

HealthInsuranceCard

HealthInsuranceCard (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Before he acted as facilitator between his COBRA and vision insurance providers in order to be seen, Jim met an elderly, retired doctor who was living out the final days of his life with a terminal illness.

He asked the old medical doctor what he did before insurance companies took over the healthcare system.

“I used to make lots of house calls as part of my practice. I treated all kinds of people, delivered babies, you name it—some folks with lots of money, some with no money at all,” said the doctor.

“If they couldn’t pay, I didn’t charge them. My practice was about the relationships I had with my patients. It wasn’t about business.”

Has the process of getting medical care worn you down like Jim and many others? Will pending government involvement help or hinder the levels of bureaucracy and overall quality of treatment received? Is the system irretrievably broken?

And is it too late to take big business out of the equation and get back to compassionate, relationship-based medical care like the dying physician practiced?

Hope not.

 

Bluecloud’s ‘PressTime’ takes the pain out of print management

In Uncategorized on March 21, 2013 at 12:00 pm
PressTime

PressTime by Bluecloud Communications, Inc.
Published in accordance and with permission from
Bluecloud Communications, Inc.
All rights reserved.

With Annual Report (10-K) season in full swing, hittingthesweetspot can appreciate the sweating over possible costly, bad decisions that get made by vendors and clients alike in the still lucrative financial reporting print business.

The sweating is done by print mangers and company counsel the world over regarding potential breakdowns that can occur when bad information is passed from one human being to another by phone, or simply when communications delivered to a general customer service inbox are lost (read email accidentally deleted).

With compliance and transactional work being fought over more fiercely than ever before, there is software out there that can help reduce, if not completely eliminate major mistakes arising from human error.

PressTime by Bluecloud Communications, Inc. is one of the most promising solutions available today—addressing the full range of communication breakdown that even Led Zeppelin would be proud of.

“The number one controllable cost is the cost of errors,” says Bluecloud Founder Don Koscheka.

PressTime is aimed at products including, but not limited to, Private Equity Fund-related documents, Term Sheets for Private Equity Financing and Annual Reports (10-K’s).

“PressTime puts you in control of when and how you publish a document and get it to your stakeholders. It allows you to manage the entire distribution process—the number of copies, versions, everything critical for successful electronic and print media distribution,” he says.

With the pace of technology as fast as it is, Bluecloud’s PressTime will not be left behind in terms of growing with the needs of its customers. With an industry standard Microsoft SharePoint document repository base, the software does indeed possess the ability for customization and scalability.

“Because PressTime is based on Microsoft’s SharePoint platform, we know it’s scalable to millions of documents and any number of users,” Koscheka says.

There is still a need for improvement in electronic and print project management and delivery. Most systems in place by financial reporting service providers utilize proprietary software that is overtaxed by trying to do too much—more than it is originally designed for. When these internal systems fail their customers’ stress tests, it negatively impacts overall quality and service.

These types of solutions by virtue of their complexity also necessitate the use of scores of human customer service agents acting as middle people in order to bring projects to fruition; they suffer from the increased risk of error that excessive human involvement brings.

PressTime reduces print errors by providing a clear, consistent communication path with audit tools to ensure that print instructions are documented. By virtue of its automation and easy to use interface, companies can ensure on-time delivery, enjoy improved project estimating as well as reduced project management costs.

The unmoving, unchanging, inertia-laden forces that are financial reporting project management would appear to be PressTime’s biggest competition in the marketplace. Systems with limited functionality already in place at traditional financial printing companies and XBRL reporting service providers, while getting the job done most times, do not offer the accountability and fluidity that PressTime does:

  • PressTime’s Customer Project Dashboard feature allows you to view all publishing projects—electronic and print—at a glance. You also have the ability to view messages for all active projects at any given time.
  • PressTime’s Project Page permits multiple elements to be added to a project and the ability to view the status of all of them.
  • The Print Specifications feature displays all aspects of a print job, links documents with specific print elements (e.g. covers), pre-defined print specifications and the ability to review and print specs. More importantly, you can track ALL changes that are made to a print job up to the last minute–you always know what changes were made and by whom.
  • Seamlessly manage distribution lists for documents, customize delivery instructions and create custom delivery packages.
  • Create and track Messages and Tasks on a project-by-project basis. You no longer have to sift through hundreds of emails to find messages that are relevant to a particular project–saving you time and reducing the potential for communications breakdowns.
Bluecloud Communications, Inc.

Bluecloud Communications, Inc.
Published in accordance and with permission from Bluecloud Communications, Inc.
All rights reserved.

PressTime is available On-Premise or Cloud-Based. It is also Mobile-friendly in that all functionality can be displayed via a mobile application.

For further information contact Bluecloud Communications, Inc. at bluecloud.com.

This blog post was sponsored by Bluecloud Communications, Inc.

Surfing Wirelessly on Old Macs

In Uncategorized on March 20, 2013 at 1:21 pm
A Wireless network interface card with a USB i...

A Wireless network interface card with a USB interface and internal antenna (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

I had an opportunity to restore wireless connectivity to a Pentium 4 HP tower running Windows XP Home recently and found myself comparing the Wi-Fi prospects of older computers such as those running XP and older versions of Mac OS X.

Windows XP is that rare, classic computer operating system that still has a very large installed user base. With that base comes the readily available abundance of Wi-Fi adapter choices for even the most ancient of PCs, along with support for much of the modern software out there today.

USB Wi-Fi sticks of some kind are available for many boxes running XP as many of these older PCs have USB 2.0 ports.

Pre G5 Macs like my G4 Tower came stock with USB 1.1. Unless you outfitted these Macs with limited choice and expensive (relative to Windows PC owners) USB 2.0 cards in one of the available PCI expansion slots, you were left with poor choices for Wi-Fi. Sometimes you could use one of these available slots for an internal solution. But again, these were expensive alternatives (I had a Motorola internal card with antenna, that although not “officially” Mac supported, worked—albeit slowly) that took up one of my precious few internal expansion slots.

The three choices for present day USB Wi-Fi for G4 Macs that I can personally vouch for are Netgear’s WG111v2 (that’s the version 2 model), Newer Technology’s MAXPower #NWTMXP2802GU2 and the Edimax EW-7811Un.

All of these solutions are USB sticks that plug in to available USB ports on either your G5 or G4 Macs. You can try them on a Blue & White G3, a Beige G3 or an iMac G3, but beware your mileage may vary as you are dealing with ancient, slower Macs as well as stock USB 1.1 ports. The Blue & White machines that are still in service require a processor upgrade card (a 1 GHz Model was popular back in the day and may still be available used on eBay), to even be remotely effective on the web today—unless you are using a text-based web browser or one that suppresses images and flash content.

For my highly upgraded G4 Sawtooth tower running Mac OS X Leopard 10.5.8, between the two Wi-Fi adapters with 802.11 b/g surfing speed compatibility (Netgear’s WG111v2 and Newer Technology’s MAX Power #NWTMXP2802GU2), I found Netgear’s WG111v2 provided the most reliable wireless connectivity.

Up until the time of my G4’s 1.8 GHz Sonnet Processor upgrade card installation, it never went to sleep on its own with the previously installed Sonnet 1 GHz processor upgrade card and flashed Geforce 6200 256 MB graphics card that gave me Core Image functionality. But much to my delight, upon installation of the 1.8 GHz Sonnet card recently, my Mac began sleeping of its own accord quite nicely once more.

The problems for my wireless USB sticks began once the Mac was awakened from sleep.

The Netgear WG111v2 (with Leopard compatible drivers) typically picked up the wireless signal upon resuming working on my Mac again. The  Newer Technology stick (also with Leopard compatible drivers), however, did not. Pulling the stick from its USB slot and reinserting sometimes restored the wireless connection. Many times, nothing short of a restart did the trick—an inconvenient situation.

The Edimax EW-7811Un is what I finally settled on. We have a Netgear router with wireless N capabilities and once I inserted the tiny Edimax Wi-Fi stick with 802.11 b/g/n capability, the Wireless Network Utility software saw it and immediately granted connectivity. Surfing the web was noticeably faster using the “N” wireless protocol, too, as were all our online devices, once using the Edimax device on the Mac; the router was finally able to offer consistently higher wireless protocol N speeds as all our devices on our home network now had N capability. Previously, surfing had been slower on our Windows laptops as the router dropped to the lower G protocol speeds that the Mac was using (the weakest link as it were) with either the Netgear or the Newer Technology USB Wi-Fi stick.

When using the Edimax, if wireless upon awaking from sleep was not working, usually removing the device from the four-port, non-powered USB 2.0 hub that is plugged in to an available port on my internal PCI USB 2.0 expansion card, and reinserting it, typically did the trick for restoring functionality upon wake from sleep. Very rarely do I have to restart the Mac to get the wireless functioning again with the Edimax.

In closing, even though solutions are more readily available for Windows XP users, when it comes to surfing wirelessly on your older PowerPC Macs, when combined with a USB 2.0 internal card, you at least have three decent products to choose from.

Girls, Wrinkles, Sunburns and Aloe Gone Wild

In Uncategorized on March 16, 2013 at 9:54 pm
Cover of "Back To School (Extra-Curricula...

Cover via Amazon

The girls that go wild get old too. Today at the pool here in Florida on spring break was all the evidence of that anyone could possibly hope for.

It’s another sign we only have so many springs, summers, falls and even winters, too, before it’s all said and done.

While making the journey from Louisville through Nashville, Chattanooga and Atlanta on the first day of the road trip, and before ultimately arriving at our destination here in the Orlando area the second, it occurred to me I was on an actual spring break for the first time in a decade and a half.

Financial printers do not do spring breaks. They are locked into work, eat, sleep mode from February through the first couple weeks of May. Sometimes, when deal activity warrants, they go into early summer—grinding it out from dust till dawn, day in and day out, over and over again.

College students, most certainly, however, do spring break.

I am a college student, albeit an old one. I’m older than most of the faculty truth be told, as well.

That is why I feel like Rodney Dangerfield in Back to School many days while I sit at my desk in the room with my class mates.

Today at the pool here in sunny, warm Orlando I didn’t do a triple lindy off the diving board like Rodney. I did get in the pool slowly, though, and looked around.

Unlike everyone at school, most everyone at the pool was older than I.

I didn’t feel any particular glee about it, just a nagging sense of finality knowing full well we all will someday get old if we live long enough.

I was also thinking that at one time many people may have come to Florida in search of the Fountain of Youth a la Ponce de Leon, but few, if any, actually found it.

Today, the youngsters flock to Florida on spring break not in search of the fountain of youth, but for a good time—sex, drugs, booze and rock ‘n’ roll. It is a reward for making it through school up until this point.

Whatever the reason, I was bound to enjoy my first actual spring break in like forever. When I was going to school the first time, “Girls Gone Wild” wasn’t even around, nor was the spring break ritual of getting wild and crazy and trying not to get in trouble while doing so.

Today I kind of got in trouble on spring break.

I got a sunburn and am paying the price blogging through it now.

Bet you didn’t know bloggers are sometimes deserving of hazardous duty pay.

I saw some alligators while walking around today, too. Some might think this is another cause for blogger hazardous duty pay. Alright, alright, they were babies and not that ferocious while sunning along the golf course waterways I went past.

They could have done some damage in theory if they would have attacked as a pack of baby alligators, maybe.

Unlike the girls, when you are older and go blogging on spring break, sometimes your imagination goes wild.

I witnessed smoking in a restaurant for the first time since the 90s during our stop in the Atlanta area.

This made my imagination run wild again.

Panama City Beach, Florida, during spring break

Panama City Beach, Florida, during spring break (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Spring breaks of the 90s had bars and restaurants with smoking in them, and Girls Gone Wild was in its infancy.

Getting wild and crazy on spring break is overrated.

But considering going to the beach tomorrow for a dip in the Atlantic Ocean for the first time in 30 years with superficial dermal stings courtesy of my back to school influenced, spring break sunburn?

Priceless.

Platforms, users stayin’ alive with browser choices

In Uncategorized on March 12, 2013 at 1:12 pm
Apple Safari icon

Apple Safari icon (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

No matter the computing platform, no matter the web browser, due to inherent limitations of browsers, platforms and systems (and although I recently made a case for Stainless on PowerPC here), there is no one size fits all mentality when it comes to surfing the web on either Windows, Apple or Linux computers.

On my Windows 7 PCs, I use Google Chrome and Firefox, depending on what I am doing, or need to do. The interfaces are just different enough, too, that I resist the temptation to use one browser exclusively, mostly so as to maintain equal dexterity with both of them. There is also always Internet Explorer 9 for those sites that for whatever reason render strangely, or for sites where you need the best compatibility in programs you use when logging in remotely to your company’s sites and services—it’s still a Windows-centric business world and that’s not changing anytime soon.

I tend to do work that does not involve writing, fastest on Windows PCs. That is because of how tightly integrated Microsoft Office is with PCs and the Internet Explorer 9 browser. Everything works more quickly and you never have to worry about compatibility issues if you live exclusively in the Microsoft business world. Open Office and LibreOffice are nice MS Office alternatives, but when you deal with either complex spreadsheets or presentations, you risk jumbled messes opening in Excel in place of the sophisticated spreadsheet you created in either OpenOffice or LibreOffice. That said, people are using these free, open source office suites with mostly good results.

On Linux I’ve used some of the browser choices available to include, but not limited to, Chrome, Firefox and Konqueror. There are many more choices, including Opera, but these three are the ones I’ve mainly experimented with. As always, your mileage will vary, as depending on your system and configuration, you will find some browser choices work better than others. Firefox on Linux is the popular standby as with stock installations such as Ubuntu, it comes as the default browser.

Most of my recent browsing variation has been done on the Mac side. Most Mac techies I know do not use Safari—Apple’s browser, for their primary web surfing. That is because most of these folks know that Google Chrome is the superior choice for speed when surfing on an Intel Mac. It loads web pages faster and doesn’t bog down like Safari after using it for awhile. Firefox is better than Safari, too, but it has its own problems by virtue of the fact you can’t decide if each new version that is released seemingly every half hour, is actually better than the last (19.0.2 by this blog post’s press time).

As a tech enthusiast and someone who advocates value computing—getting the most computing bang for your hard earned buck regardless of platform, I find the choices on the PowerPC side of the Mac equation the most interesting.

English: Browser usage share on Wikimedia Foun...

English: Browser usage share on Wikimedia Foundation projects on June 2011. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Compared to the big two of Chrome and Firefox on either a Linux, Windows or a Mac Intel box, your choices for good speed on the PowerPC side are fairly limited. The PowerPC platform is really old in terms of computing years, but the fact that there is still such an interest world-wide in these ancient machines demonstrates that while their numbers may be diminishing overall, they are still represented quite nicely by all things web browser.

The latest release of TenFourFox (17.0.4) is getting quite a bit of love on my Power Mac G4 Sawtooth on OS X Leopard 10.5.8. Stainless still has a place in my heart, too, by virtue of the parallel sessions feature. Leopard Webkit while showing flashes of speed brilliance, still tends to bog down and become jerky for me after using it awhile. OmniWeb is great, but the appearance could use a makeover, as it feels dated. Even so, it is probably the most consistent, stable browser for Leopard OS PowerPC Macs I deploy in day-to-day use. Then there’s Camino—while it hasn’t been updated (and may never be again?) in quite some time (been at version 2.1.2 for a lonngg time), as a PowerPC user you could do a lot worse for overall speed, reliability and performance, if this were the only browser you could use.

Your browser is not who you are, it is merely a tool that you use—you are not a Mac or PC or Linux-“er.” And since no one tool gets every job done, delight in the choices available. Try as many of them as you like and support the developers of those less popular browsing choices with donations or at least let them know you appreciate their efforts—a plethora of good software availability benefits all of us.

Nuke and Pave Remains Most Popular Fix of All

In Uncategorized on March 10, 2013 at 9:21 pm
Sawtooth Mountains

Sawtooth Mountains (Photo credit: gabri_micha)

As someone who has done their share of experimenting across the popular computer playing fields that are Windows, Apple and Linux, I remain convinced of one thing: as long as variables are introduced (read system and application software update installations), we will suffer the inevitable degradation in performance these endeavors bring.

As our computers age, they feel less snappy and this is because they actually are this way. If you regularly update your machine with software that creates increasing demands on its overall processing power, there will come a day when you will seek at least one solution to regain some “oomph” in your daily computing life.

Many times, if you are not inclined to attempt repair yourself, you will bring the machine in question to your tech person. When a tech person hears complaints of slowness, random crashes or general malaise, after ruling out hardware issues, he/she will often turn to a clean install of some kind to remedy these issues.

Once a PC is infected with say, malware, a complete reformatting of your disk (erase) and fresh installation of your Windows operating system and programs is often the path of least resistance, not to mention the biggest time and expense saver.

On a Mac, random glitches that were common when users of the latest Snow Leopard version tried updating to Lion or Mountain Lion (if their machines supported it) were sometimes solved by an Archive and Install of the operating system. Other times, nothing short of a complete re-formatting and new installation of either Lion or Mountain Lion would suffice.

For those experimenting with Linux, I’ve had software updates completely brick my systems in both Ubuntu and MintPPC, leaving me no choice but to start over—erasing and reloading everything.

Could I have troubleshooted the source of these problems before resorting to erasing and reinstalling? Sure, and I did, but their comes a point when we ask ourselves what our time is worth. So, always having a backup in the event of disaster striking, I just went the reformat and reload route.

Kernel panic in Mac OS X.

Kernel panic in Mac OS X. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

All of these nuke and pave scenarios are indicative of the complexities of the modern day operating systems we use and love (sometimes).

I’ve used and abused my Power Mac G4 so much over the years, but never once needed to nuke and pave or even perform an Archive and Install in order to get things working again.

When I bought it used it was running Mac OS 9—and rather well, too. I proceeded to load OS X 10.2.8 Jaguar on it, as I wanted to finally immerse myself in Apple’s operating system of the future (OS X).

With the help of hacks and hardware upgrades I was able to get up to OS X Leopard 10.5.8, where Apple stranded myself and all other PowerPC Mac users.

But being stranded at Leopard has not necessarily been a bad thing when you consider all that I am still able to do with this sturdy, trusted and still fleet enough computer.

The build quality of the G4 Towers, especially the Sawtooths, were such that nothing that Apple has made since even Intel platform-wise, can hold a candle to in terms of durability, stability, performance, upgrade-ability and return on investment.

Whether it’s a logic board going bad on your Intel Mac or the integrated graphics failing just when your baby is mere days removed from its extended AppleCare warranty, we are left to accept that with technological progress, comes planned obsolescence.

Apple is all about sexy, and sexy, sleek designs promote heat buildup, which leads to premature failing of internal components—heat is the enemy of computer internal electronics.

As much of the country springs forward with Daylight Saving Time today, I am very content to still be able to fall back on my old Sawtooth indefinitely into the technological future.

Long may you run.

Being mindful of what you represent

In Uncategorized on March 8, 2013 at 1:41 pm
English: The logo of The University of Louisville.

English: The logo of The University of Louisville. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Before I was allowed to go on liberty while abroad in the Navy, I was always fully aware that I was not only representing the U.S. Navy, but the United States as well.

I understood this was a responsibility, and my behavior—good or bad, was not only a reflection on myself, but also on that of my country and branch of military service.

Oftentimes it came down to good decision-making while ashore. Many of us had curfews for when we needed to return to our ships or bases. Most of us on deployment in the Navy were imbibing in adult beverages for the first time in many weeks or months, and our tolerance for these libations was diminished; this alone had the potential to greatly impair our judgment while out having fun.

Being committed to always putting our best foot forward, whether it’s going out on a job interview, doing your actual job or just being out and about downtown somewhere, can have lasting, positive influences on you as an individual, and all those you come in contact with while doing so.

While out dining downtown Louisville recently and enjoying our dinner and spirits, my sweetie and I noticed a bit of a buzz concerning a young man and his dinner party, sitting at the table next to ours.

There was not anything loud or rambunctious going on; just a steady stream of folks that began approaching the young man at the table. Rhonda recognized him as someone on the University of Louisville men’s basketball team.

“Ah! That would explain it,” I thought.

We realized it was Junior Forward Luke Hancock, or, Rhonda did.

I’m still getting acclimated to just how hugely important Louisville basketball, and basketball in general (UK anyone?) is to Kentucky.

I’ve long since stopped trying to follow the Denver Broncos, Nuggets, Rockies and Avalanche professional sports teams I left behind in Denver.

Even though it’s a smaller world via all the technology available, it still takes a concerted effort to follow sports teams once you leave a town. It happened when I left New York. I soon adopted Denver teams as it took too much effort to keep up with my Yankees, Knicks and Giants.

Denver

Denver (Photo credit: halseike)

One thing that someone who enjoys anonymity like myself notices, is how someone who is not able to just blend in to the scenery while out dining, behaves while in the public eye.

People were coming up to the young Mr. Hancock and asking him for his autograph. Again, I initially found it odd as he’s on a college team and not a pro one. But, I’m finally starting to get it now that I’ve been here going on five months and we are entering March Madness time (I suspect I will follow the tournament more than I ever have before this year, too). I’ve even had the distinct privilege of being able to enjoy a few basketball games at the Yum! Center, too—both women and men’s basketball team games.

Hancock fielded each request for both autographs and photographs with grace, flair and alacrity. He is obviously aware that he is representing more than himself while he’s in public, but I suspect the young man gets the big picture and has the good sense to behave well because it is seen as just the right thing to do.

Before we left, we walked up to Luke (it’s the end of this post and he’s on a first name basis, now, yes ;-) ), congratulated him on a good game and wished him good luck the rest of the way.

If you haven’t realized by now, I was largely impressed at how he carried himself while out having a meal with what was probably his family and/or friends—and never getting rude or disrespectful at the fairly constant stream of people in the restaurant who wanted some of his time.

Go Cards.

 

Better than Seinfeld: A blog almost about nothing

In Uncategorized on March 5, 2013 at 4:29 pm

 

Primitive Word Processor

Primitive Word Processor (Photo credit: DaleC/@flickrfumes)

I heard someone complaining the other day that their life was so busy they didn’t have time to waste time on the Internet anymore and it got me to thinking (I know, a dangerous proposition).

As I’m not actually having conversations with anyone so much as I am hearing snippets of other peoples’ chats (nosy? No, I just have big ears) as I go about my day, I found myself agreeing with this person.

Our expectations are for immediate gratification when we are on the Internet. That’s great, too, as with broadband, we are able to be concise and efficient with our searches and for the most part are able to find what we’re looking for and then move on.

During the dial-up days we used to multi-task a lot more. We used to exercise, make coffee, crack open a frosty cold beverage (or two or three), make pancakes, love and not war, do laundry, even, while we waited for pages to load. It was fine, too. Just like when you were a kid (alright, maybe not when you were a kid) and black and white TV was all there was and it was just fine.

“I wish I could hang out on Facebook a lot like I used to!”

Me too.

Today especially, I didn’t have the time, but wanted my Facebook status to be something like, “I hate it when I tie my sneakers in double knots, forget I’ve done so, and then curse when I’m trying to take them off at the end of the day and end up creating a bad knot that takes me way too long to undo before I can take the sneaks off.”

These kinds of moments, at least for me, are reminiscent of the golden days of social media.

I know you think social media hasn’t been around long enough to have golden days.

But it has.

That’s because the world changes so fast nowadays, the golden days could be like a few weeks ago.

I remember when proprietary software was acceptable.

Now you have to be on standards-based platforms of Microsoft origin in order to have the widest adoption of your software.

Even people who like to waste time don’t have the time anymore to do so—they did when the software that drove things was proprietary; now the standard calls for efficiency and no more time wasting.

If all I did was blog maybe I could hang out a lot on Facebook, get into Twitter more (should I?) and go back to spending entire mornings online before realizing that even though I just ate breakfast (four hours ago), it is now time for lunch (and hopefully more web time afterwards).

Busy and fast, fast and busy.

That’s the way we have to be.

Some bloggers are so fast to create their postings they do things like type the word to to twice without realizing they’ve done it. My word processor knew it wasn’t a typo and even alerted me to the fact I repeated the word “to.”

That means my word processor was able to prevent a mistake other than a typo or a grammatical error.

That is comforting and sad simultaneously. Comforting because I can confidently compose here without worrying about whether I will make many mistakes that will make it to hittingthesweetspot; painful because it sometimes feels like I’m being controlled way too much by technology.

Image representing iPhone as depicted in Crunc...

Image via CrunchBase

An event just went off on my iPhone reminding me to finish this now. Nah, who am I kidding? I’m not that important. I just want to go back online unnecessarily, look at nothing in particular and spend time I can never have back.

TTFN.

 

 

 

Unhappy Munchkins Notwithstanding, Things Are Better—Here’s Why

In Uncategorized on March 3, 2013 at 11:04 pm
Munchkins (specifically the "Lollipop Gui...

Munchkins (specifically the “Lollipop Guild”) as depicted in the 1939 film The Wizard of Oz. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Although as humans we are inundated with modern-day tales of gloom and doom, and it seems that bad news far exceeds anything good that is heard or seen, we are living in the greatest period of overall prosperity the world as a whole has ever known.

We may have lost sight of this because even though there are more millionaires and billionaires walking around, their overall numbers are weak and of small stature by a greater margin than ever, in comparison to those totals of earners of more modest means.

And you wouldn’t realize how prosperous we are based on how miserable even those I term the new wealth munchkins among us, are.

Prosperity does not always lend itself to peace or happiness, but it sure buys a lot of neat stuff. There is something to be said for the peace of mind that wealth can offer in the form of security, though, and I grant the munchkins have security over those of us with less financial clout.

For those of us able to keep it all in perspective, however, we are still able to enjoy the best life has to offer again and again.

This is because the best things in life remain what they always have been and are more attainable than ever, because most of us are in a position to make healthy, educated and correct choices for ourselves.

By opening the turbulent gates of prosperity to the relative masses, though, federal governments in both the numbers one and two economic powers, the United States and China, respectively, are feeling the need to keep close watch over our newfound wealth munchkins in both countries—the halcyon days of each country having long since passed.

The Wicked Witch of the West from The Wonderfu...

The Wicked Witch of the West from The Wonderful Wizard of Oz is an example of a literary villain. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Munchkins in the Wizard of Oz were adorable citizens of a make-believe land who lived in harmony with their fellow munchkins as well as their leaders, and even their enemies—they knew who was bad (the Wicked Witch of the West) and avoided interacting with these negative sorts who would harm and/or hurt themselves and others.

We are all being watched, scrutinized, audited, counted, but the wealthy are in slides under the microscope.

Is it still good to be rich? Yes and no.

If given the choice most of us wouldn’t flinch at the chance to be.

But with great wealth, comes great responsibility.

The rich will continue to pay for more of the upkeep of the masses in the form of greater taxation. They will be taxed more as private citizens. The corporations they run will face increased costs of doing business.

For the wealthy, how they measure happiness can be found in the value of their portfolios.

And for all the wealth concentration that has gone on since the dawn of the digital age, the subsequent dot bomb crash of 2000, the 2008 financial crisis and the rebuilding of the Wall Street and Goldman Sachs investment banking empires through present day, the wealthy understand that as long as everyone else has life’s basic staples, that is, they can eat, clothe themselves, have a roof over their heads and can scratch out enough of a living to pay their bills, they can remain living in harmony just like the cast in the Wizard of Oz.

The rich and powerful are in fact counting on it.

That, and the fact our attention spans have never been shorter.

Just when we are all up in arms, outraged over some issue we can’t remember 72 hours from now, mainstream media will distract us with yet another report of blight in another part of the world other than our own—we can’t own what’s not happening in our own back yards, and they get this.

What makes us happy? Are the rich and powerful more happy than anyone else?

We have the benefit of knowledge, science, technology and modern medicine to help in our quest for contentment. If we are fortunate enough to make good choices by demonstrating self-control more often than not, have love in our hearts and by extension our lives as well, we will never stop rising above munchkins of greater financial persuasion.

 

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