Surviving the Zombie Apocalypse in Style

May 14th, 2010

I was in Borders Books perusing the high end auto classifieds in the DuPont Registry looking at all the wonderfully exotic and classic cars people have and the enormous price tags on some of those beauties.  One of the ad pages in the magazine caught my attention with a body style I had never seen before called an STV.

They termed it the Shadow Hawk Super Terrain Vehicle.  The company hand builds each one to custom specs at a rate of 12 per year and it seems like the desert model would be the ultimate “survivor vehicle”.  :)

Wacky Industry Jargon

May 11th, 2010

I have been in the job market for a while now and I have talked with numerous recruiters and HR personnel.  Many times their accent to too thick to understand or they pronounce acronyms incorrectly, but I ran into one recruiter email today which made me laugh heartily for a few minutes.


Excellent problem-solving and coding skills

Good understanding of POOP (Principles of Object Oriented Programming) and coding best-practices, e.g. unit testing, reusability, refactoring, etc.

Experience with database development and design, both with RDBMSes and NoSQL solutions

Familiarity with web application architecture and deployment

I didn’t realize that some of what I learned in college was literally “crap”.  The NoSQL solutions is just priceless, too.

http://news.cnet.com/8301-30686_3-20004585-266.html?tag=TOCmoreStories.0

Revisiting an old injury I did not miss

February 20th, 2010

Since Monday, I’ve been living with an old injury that has resurfaced – Rotator cuff tendinitis.  During my last ordeal, the doctors were amazed that someone so young had it, that my background did not fit their risk profiles, and that my particular case also had a rare twist with it.  The injury, they explained, was the result of too much stress on the shoulder muscles to the point where they become inflamed and rub against each other.  The rubbing causes the pain.  There can also be some tearing, which causes scar tissue to form and that scar tissue will rub against the other muscles and also cause pain.

I had to attend a class on this injury to learn more about it and what were my options regarding treatment.  I was the youngest one present by a span of decades.  I learned that the injury “almost always” occurs in relation to your occupation or if you are a certain kind of athlete that needs to routinely raise their arms in the air (think tennis player, traffic cop, hairdresser).  Those kinds of professions and activities over a lifetime can lead to rotator cuff tendinitis.  None of these kinds of activities describes what I do or even anything I regularly perform, let alone having done them over a lifetime.  I also have a twist upon the normal tendinitis in that my muscle scar tissue calcifies… becomes tiny bits of bone.  I was told it was like having very rough sandpaper sprinkled throughout the muscle and it causes severe pain whenever the muscles flex.

There are two basic treatments for this kind of injury – surgery or rest.  Surgery came with a 50/50 risk vs. reward, with the risk being that increased damage to the shoulder is just as likely as not and that any damage incurred during surgery is likely permanent.  Just getting rest is both long (6 months is common) and complicated by the fact that relaxing the shoulder is damn near impossible.  You see, the shoulder is a ball and socket joint with muscles all around it.  It is one of the few joints the body has which allows extreme movement in any direction.  This means that no matter what position you are in (sitting, standing, lying down, etc.) at least one of the muscles in the shoulder is flexing just to counteract the weight of the arm against gravity to keep the ball joint centered within the socket.  This also means that at least a few of the muscles are constantly being flexed and cause pain.

I do not wish to choose surgery, I do not want to risk further injury.  I have lived with it before, in 2006, and fully recovered, so I plan to do so again.  The pain was much worse then and I took nearly 10 months to fully recover.  It was during that time that I learned to play WoW with one hand.  I eventually got to a point where I could prop my right arm such that I could use the mouse, but it was still limiting with having to type with one hand.  This time, while still quite painful, I already know the symptoms and the treatment process and have taken steps already to minimize the effects, but they are still present.  I hardly sleep more than 4 hours since that’s how long it takes for the ibuprofen to wear off and the pain to come back in force.  I cannot use my right arm for just about anything and merely holding my cell phone is enough to cause pain – lifting my arm is impossible at this stage.  I am able to prop my arm up so that I can play WoW and use a mouse, but typing is severely hampered by having to use just one hand.  I’ve recently managed to use my left arm to lift my right arm from the mouse and place it on the keyboard in order to type, but by doing so, it also means a brief pause when I finish typing to move my arm back over to the mouse.  Such back and forth movements during combat are prohibitive, which forces me to be quiet or have slow reactions to written communication.  If my dwelling had thicker walls, I could use a microphone without disturbing anyone, but unfortunately, that is not the case.

Getting dressed using just one arm, brushing teeth with my offhand, complications using a computer… I’ve gone through this all before and it lasted many months.  I am hoping that I’ve learned enough during my previous experience that I am able to adapt quicker and hopefully recover in a much shorter time than before.  This time I do not have to retrain my body to not sleep on my injured arm, which is what I had to do last time.  You don’t realize how hard it is to train your body to perform, or not to perform, certain actions while you are asleep, but it can be done. I used to require placing my head upon my right arm as I went to sleep each night.  Once that became impossibly painful, I had to retrain myself to avoid doing so, usually waking up many times a night wracked in pain from having rolled over and back onto my arm.  Sleeping is still painful though since nothing is ever comfortable or relaxing for my injured shoulder.  Thankfully, Advil works to lessen the pain enough most times so that I get some form of sleep until it wears off and I need another dose.

Apologies in advance to those who group with me in WoW.  Playing can be painful at times, but I hope it has little impact on my reaction speed… though it definitely has an impact on my communication responsiveness.

The Value of Freedom

December 10th, 2009

America’s freedom may be purchased through her military strength, but how many realize that it is just as important for everyone, not just those in her military, to be ever vigilant about retaining those freedoms?  How many can look at any proposed law change and see such a change as bolstering or eroding our freedoms? I guess one way is to learn from someone else’s successes and failures. A friend emailed me a part of an eyewitness account of what occurred in Austria around the time of WWII.  I found it quite thought provoking since it was not a “what if” – rather it was “this happened”.  Instead of reprinting it here, I will just supply a link for those interested in a little bit of history as told by someone who lived through it:  America Truly is the Greatest Country in the World. Don?t Let Freedom Slip Away.

Truth is Stranger than Fiction – Episode 2

November 10th, 2009

Driving along the east coast in October, I came across a strange sight.  I found myself northbound on U.S. Highway 9 taking the scenic route (and avoiding the toll roads) along the coast.  The highway meanders up through small towns, colorful autumn forests and crossing river outlets to the ocean.  Rounding a bend in the road 7 miles south of Tuckerton, NJ and just south of the New Gretna Post Office, in field to the west side of the road at mile point 55.8, I came upon a strange sight.

Wine Bottle Statue

Wine Bottle Statue

A 20 foot tall concrete wine bottle statue.  Off the side of the road in a small field between two houses.  No historic marker around, no signage, no liquor store nearby, no winery nearby, nothing that would indicate a reason for such a monument.  And yet, there it was – larger than life.  After some searching on the net, I found a link that seems to shed some light onto this strange subject. Apparently, this is an old promotional statue for south Jersey’s Renault Winery and now sits abandoned.

Truth is Stranger Than Fiction – Episode 1

October 9th, 2009

(or WTF of the Day)

I was driving along in New York City the other day… no, that is not the WTF… anyway…

I was stopped at a red light when I happened to look over at the garbage truck beside me. WTF?

Cheap Date?

Cheap Date?

What’s the story behind the plaid shirted, child sized doll strapped to the under-fender of a garbage truck?

Other interesting things I’ve seen this past week in which I do not have a corresponding photo to show is a mailbox shaped like a small block Chevy V8 (Maine).  I’ve also passed one of those fish shaped mailboxes with a rope tied to it’s tail that led to a “stick fisherman” silhouette a few yards away as if it was catching the fish-box (Delaware) — that one made me laugh out loud for a good five minutes.

I’ll be posting more when I can find the friggen photos.  I have filled up an 8gig card and working on another 2gig one.  That’s about 1500+ pics with a few videos tossed in the mix.

Dream Come True!

September 28th, 2009

I took my check ride today and passed!  I now officially have a Private Pilot License.  :D

/dance

/dance

/dance

Frustrations

September 25th, 2009

I have been trying to take the final test in my Private Pilot’s license, known as a “check ride”, for nearly a month now.  The first delay was due to thunderstorms.  The next delay had to do with the airplane I had been using this whole time breaking down and being retired instead of fixed.  After an hour of two of familiarity training in the replacement plane, a Cessna 172 m, it went in for repairs for over a week.  In the meantime, the company also reorganized, so red tape slowed everything down.  A week ago, my scheduled check ride was in process: oral interview went fine; computer problems were being overcome with a printer I yanked out of storage; a 1/4 inch splinter that jabbed itself under my right thumbnail was painful, but still workable; even the weather was turning from crappy to nice… and then came the pre-flight check of the airplane.  The alternator belt had snapped in two.  Wonderful.  On the bright side, a new belt was already strapped in place just for an occasion like this so that the propeller need not be taken off in order to fix it.  A mechanic is called out and we can hopefully finish my test.  Unfortunately, after waiting for a mechanic to check things out, he declared the alternator bearings shot and nothing would get fixed for 3 or 4 days anyway.  Test postponed… again.

Which brings us to today.  I prepare yet again for a check ride, staying up late and waking up early to go over the flight plan, weather information, map checkpoints, fuel calculations, etc.  I drive out to the airport early to fly out to some other airport where the test will take place… and… the keys to the plane are not on their normal hook.  In fact, they are nowhere to be found in the office nor in the airplane itself.  I don’t really panic about that since the weather is not cooperating anyway.  I wait at the airport for 5 hours hoping the weather will clear up enough for me to fly out and take my test.  I wait in vain as I see the sun for 5 minutes during that whole time and by afternoon, it is raining and we postpone everything until Monday.  The keys are still missing, but I found out one of the resident mechanics has a spare and I can borrow it if need be if the missing keys are not found by Monday.

On a side note,  I really like Jack Johnson.

YouTube Preview Image

Photos of Flight

September 9th, 2009

I’ve gathered a bunch of my photos that I’ve been taking on and off over the past month when I was at the airport and when flying solo and had some time to spare.  Enjoy!

Bootable USB Flash Drive

September 2nd, 2009

I recently had the need to install an OS onto a netbook that doesn’t have a CD drive.  How does one get a bootable USB flash drive?  I have a laptop with a DVD drive so that I can take a CD and copy it to a USB flash drive, but just copying the contents won’t make it bootable so that you can install an OS. I spent a few days researching the subject and after numerous trials, I found two solutions worthy of mention.

For Linux ISOs, I found UNetbootin to be extremely easy to use and works quite well.   I would use this solution even if a CD drive was available since this means I would not have to burn a CD/DVD and could just (re)use one of the many flash drives I have lying around ($12, 4GB drives ftw).

For Windows, specifically WinXP although it also works with Vista and a few others, I highly recommend USB_MultiBoot_10.  It was the only series of programs that would reliably copy a CD onto a USB flash drive and make it bootable.  It was more complex than using UNetbootin, but I suppose that cannot be helped.  At least it worked!  This would even allow you to set up things for unattended installs which is very handy!

  • Kothnok's Magic Mirror

    Character portraitStarcaller Kothnok
    <Twìlíght> of Alexstrasza-US
    Level 80 Night Elf Druid
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