Friday, June 22, 2007

Technician, Heal Thyself....'s Computer

Ok, so it was risky, taking a soldering iron to the surface mount connections on a printed circuit board inside my laptop, but I was desperate. I had not been able to get the second RAM slot to work. The memory card is good but the slot would not recognize it unless it was pressed down toward the board. I had tried a mechanical work-around but that only had limited success.

Faulty RAM SlotSo it was time to try the electrical fix. I figured there had to be a cracked or cold solder joint in one of the connections to the main board. Unfortunately, they are barely big enough to see, let alone attack with a hot iron 8 times bigger. I got it good and clean (solder flux is a wonderful thing) and tinned up with my best silver-bearing solder and went to work. I tried to see if the solder was heating and flowing on each connection as I went, but even with my highest mag reading glasses, I could not see them very well.

I saw an oldRepaired connections SLR 50mm lens nearby which I had used to take some extreme closeup pictures before and thought it might work as a "jeweler's loop". I was then able to examine all of the connections and see if any looked like they were still not connected. I was able to see a few which were questionable and then work on them as I watched through the lens. finally, I think I got it properly soldered in and the memory is now working.

I was afraid for a while that I had killed my laptop. I had partially melted some of the resistors close to the connections and was getting some blue-screens on boot up. Finally it would not even go into POST. Upon further examination, I realized there may be some solder bridges between the connections, so I scraped them out with a pin and tried again. Success!

Monday, June 04, 2007

The weekend airplane flight trip from heck!

Ok, now I understand why people are sometime reluctant to take trips by air. For the most part, Ellyn and I have been fortunate over the years to have had very good luck with flight scheduling, reliability, baggage handling, on-time departure and arrival, etc. We have had some trouble with unforeseen problems, but NOTHING like this past weekend. Holy Moly!

We went to Cincinnati, OH to attend the ordination of a very good friend of ours as a Rabbi. The events in Ohio involving the ceremony and the parties afterward went off without a hitch and we had a wonderful time. It was the approach and return which are the subject of this story.

We left on Friday from Danbury with two really good friends of ours, Barbara and Albert Uziel, for Laguardia Airport in NY for a direct flight to Dayton. OH. They picked us up in their car early Friday AM and we parked at a offsite lot in Queens and shuttled to the terminal. Ellyn and I checked our luggage with the airline, US Airways, and we all went for a leisurely breakfast in the terminal before heading to the gate.

As we were walking down the concourse, Barbara looked at one of the banks of screens showing the departures and arrivals and exclaimed "It's been canceled!". Um, what? She ran to the gate and then we headed for the service desk, where we could be rebooked on another flight. No explanation of why it was canceled, it just was. (I suspect equipment failure)

As we were waiting, Ellyn and Barbara got on the phone with Travelocity.com and US Airways respectively and tried to get new flights. Ellyn had some problems, but Barbara was able to get them booked on a flight leaving in just 20 minutes to Charlotte, NC and then to Cincinnati. We "piggybacked" on that move and were able to get onto the same flights. Great! But our luggage was ticketed to Dayton. Oops. And we had a rental car reserved in Dayton. Oops. Ok, those can be fixed when we get to Charlotte, since we had to hustle to make the flight.

The rental car was an easy fix. Ellyn's and my luggage had to be picked up by the airline and delivered to us in Cincinnati. It took some explaining, first by phone and then at the Cincinnati airport before it was set up to be accomplished. However, we were going to services on Friday evening at the synagogue and need some appropriate clothing. Barbara and Albert got a cab from the airport to the hotel while Ellyn and I got into the rental car and went to a nearby mall to shop for clothes. Fortunately, we found a Macy's and they had many things on sale, so we were able to outfit ourselves pretty reasonably and just in the nick of time.

Our luggage was delivered to the hotel that evening at midnight. We thought the worst was over. Silly us.

Since we had picked the car up in Cincinnati, we decided to save ourselves an hour drive to Dayton to fly back to NY, and changed our flights to go back through Charlotte. The day started out with a delay in Cincinnati, which turned our 2 hour leisurely stroll in Charlotte into a one hour hustle to get food and get to the gate. That flight also got off a little late but we were on our way. Then the pilot came on the intercom and told us that air traffic had us in a holding pattern near Virginia, probably due to weather in the NY area, although he never confirmed this. After a while he said we had spent too much fuel waiting and had to return to Charlotte. Uh.

When we landed in Charlotte, everyone, including me and Barbara, got on their cell phones and called US Airways for new arrangements. I talked with someone who said he had confirmed us on a later flight to Laguardia, but Barbara said they had told her that all flights for that evening into the NY area airports were all full. When we got inside the terminal, they sprinted off to try to get onto a flight to Newark, NJ on standby. Ellyn and I sauntered off to a US Airways ticket window to get boarding passes for our new flight.

A complication was that the crew of the returning flight told us our bags would be delivered to the carousels in the terminal, since they assumed many of us would be in hotels for the night, so, if we had a flight out that evening, we would have to re-check the bags. But, we needed the boarding passes to get back into the concourse if we went out to get the bags. So we waited patiently until someone was able to get us our passes. After visits to two different agents, we finally found out that the "Einstein" I had talked to on the phone from the plane had booked on the 9:55 PM flight on Monday, instead of Sunday. No wonder there was seats for us.

So know we are resigned to staying over and the earliest flight home would not be until 2:15 on Monday. Barbara and Albert were still trying to get on a flight standby but had also confirmed seats on a flight on Monday. But Barbara mentioned she had seen a flight to Hartford that evening, which would not help them, since their car was at Laguardia airport. We checked that out and decided to take a chance on it, although weather could still be a factor. Also, it was already delayed nearly an hour until 10:40 PM.

Still, there was the baggage problem, although the ticket agent thought the baggage would still be in holding for a flight. I grabbed my boarding pass anyway and headed for the main terminal. Sure enough. the bags were on their umteenth turn around the carousel. I grabbed them and ran upstairs to check them onto the Hartford flight. I had to jump ahead of a line of passengers trying to get onto any flights that night or the next day themselves, so I could get the bags checked and get back through security before it closed (!) at 10:15 PM. I just made that and Ellyn and I were able to get onto the flight and make it to Hartford. We also found out that Barbara and Albert had been able to get onto the NJ flight on standby.

A quick rental car reservation in Hartford was able to get us home by 2:30 AM on Monday (groan). The last we heard from Barbara and Albert was when we had gotten into the rental car, and they were in Newark trying to get a cab or other transportation to Laguardia to get their car.

Ellyn had to drag herself out of bed this morning so we could return the rental car and she could get to work by 9:00 for a meeting. On Thursday, we get to start the whole process over again when we fly to the bay area of California for her Father's 80th birthday celebration. Hopefully the travel plans will go off with somewhat less of a hitch this time. Keep your fingers crossed.

Thursday, May 31, 2007

My sons get me!

This is great. I guess I raised my sons right. You know you have arrived as a great father when, at the ripe old age of 58, they both buy you gifts that you would normally get for a 10 year old. No socks, no shirts, no ties. Also I have given them an idea for Father's Day; renew my pro account on Flickr.

Another Helicopter pic


Thanks Logan, Maureen, and Brian.

Monday, May 21, 2007

Pop goes the Leo


On the latest "This Week In Tech" netcast from Leo LaPorte, Leo had a bit of an "on mic" incident. Listen carefully to this excerpt from the show. Sure wish it was a v-cast!

Saturday, January 13, 2007

Detached vitreous?


Eww. So last night I noticed a spot in my eye, which I assumed was a "floater", which I have always had and had gotten more noticeable in recent years. Then I was driving after dark and noticed a flashing in the corner of my eye when I would move it rapidly from one side to the other. Well this seemed to be something my eye doctors were always asking me about but something I had not noticed before.

We looked up the symptoms on the web and, once I realized the "floater" was stationary, I decided to call the eye doctor and go in. He put a bunch of drops in my eyes and looked around with a very bright light, then said it was a detached vitreous, which may not be a problem, but he wants to make sure it does not tear the retina. I have to go see a retina specialist in two weeks.

Hilariously, we ran into the doctor again a couple hours later in Stew Leonards. You see everybody there.

Wednesday, January 03, 2007

I'm Back in the USSA!


Ok, so few knew we were gone but Ellyn and I had a wonderful 12 day trip to Israel with the Shir Tikva congregation of Waltham, MA (Rabbi Gold). It was a very intensive tour of Israel and it was great. Over 2000 digital photos were recorded by Ellyn and I on two cameras and they are still smoking! Some have been posted on Flickr but I have yet to create a complete record of our trip.

The bad news from the trip: Ellyn hurt her leg when she fell in a Bedouin tent and is recovering. No broken bones but a sever bruise to the lower leg (same one she had knee surgery on, that she whacked in the firey smash-up, and that she broke the ankle on when she was 3). Also, I came down with a cold just before the trip, which I gladly passed around, and it came back like gangbusters. Also, I lost my wallet at the Frankfurt Airport, but got the news this morning that it was found, they have it, and will ship it to me. Hopefully I will have it back by the end of the week.

Monday, January 01, 2007

A New Year, back in the E.R.

Nuts. 2007 is starting as did 2006. Ellyn is a DHS in the ER with a pain in her leg. This was caused by a fall at a Bedouin camp on 12/25 in Israel and her leg is all bruised up. It is still hurting and the bruised area is noticeably more warm than the rest of her leg. She looked up info on line about it this morning and decided it could be serious enough to warrant a look by a Dr. So, off tho the ER. I am sitting here with her, entering this blog post. Gotta cough myself but not interested in getting poked or prodded, so I will keep it to myself.

Happy New Year.

P.S. Ellyn had an x-ray and nothing is broken. Compression and warmth for the next two days to reduce the swelling.

Friday, December 08, 2006

Jury duty, again?


I have to start playing the lottery. I have been called up for jury duty 3 times since 1999. I served on 9/9/99, was called again in April of 2004 and I asked for a delay until October because of our Anniversary cruise. So I had to report on 10/15/04, but the pool was cancelled. Now I had to report again on 12/5/06. I was going to try to get out but decided to go ahead with it. I guess a cancelled pool does not count as having served.

I was called to talk to the lawyers for one trial but I had an out, because they were going to go until the 22nd before breaking for the holidays and we are going on vacation before that. I had my laptop with me but they have no Internet access. I was able to get a week signal from Meeker Hardware (ssid=meeker), but it was encrypted (smart). I had some data to work with so I was able to keep myself busy, but the clerk said something about techs being able to "work from here" and "use their cellphones" but with no Internet connection the first was out and I you cannot bring in a cellphone with a camera in it.

After we were released I asked the clerk who I should send a note to about the possibility of getting Internet access installed there. I think that business people would be more willing to serve if they knew they could get access to email and other work resources while waiting in the jury room for 8 hours. Maybe CM/IT could get the contract.

Monday, December 04, 2006

Friday, December 01, 2006

Geotagging Revisited

I have discovered that you can automatically tag a photo if you have a GPS receiver turned on while you are taking your photos and the time signatures on the photos and the GPS track are in synch, and then have an application which can match them up and put the longitude and latitude into the EXIF data. Then, when the photo is posted on an online service like Flickr, it can be located on a map.



Geotagged with WWMX Location Stamper

I am using the USPhotoMaps program to download the GPS data and create the .gpx file and the WWMX Location Stamper to match up the track data and the photos and stamp the geotag data into them.

Wednesday, November 22, 2006

End of an Era?

I really can't believe it myself but I think I may be reaching the end of my fanatic ways with NASCAR. I decided this year that I would not be as diligent in watching every race, every lap, and instead watch whole races only when I had the time. As it turned out, toward the end of the season, I had very little time. I missed the second Talladega race, I totally forgot about the second Charlotte race being at night, and I nearly missed the Homestead finale. I saw only about the last 40 laps when I caught the fact that it was still on when in Stew Leonards.

I guess that when I wrenched myself away from it, I found it somewhat liberating and I started to lose interest, believe it or not. I guess with Mark Martin retiring, I have finally lost most of the people who were in it when I started getting really interested back in 1989. I watched the races I could see with relish when I was a kid, lost touch during the Navy and college years, when I really watched very little TV, and did not pursue it when I had the time, in the 80's until I discovered that they carried nearly every race of the season on cable.


The first one I remember seeing was the finale race of 1989, when Rusty Wallace won the Cup. I started in watching the races regularly the next season, when Dale Earnhardt started his rise, winning in '90, '91, '93, and '94. Then Jeff Gordon came along and started his streak, winning 3 of the last 4 in the 90's. In the 2000's, Winston went away and Nextel came into the picture. Next year, Toyota enters the series and in 2008 the "Car of Tomorrow" will be used.


I will probably not stop watching completely, and might even change my mind completely by next February, but I think it may really be the end of an era.

Tuesday, November 14, 2006

More political cartoon high-jinks

These showed up back-to-back in on my cartoon page this morning.



Sunday, November 12, 2006

Filmloop

This is pretty cool.


Thursday, November 09, 2006

I gave out a Flickr Minicard

MiniCards

I gave out one of my Flickr cards yesterday to a customer who was considering getting a digital camera. I pointed out how digital photography is so much fun and how you can post your photos online for friends and family to see. I am carrying them with me now. I missed a chance last week to give one out. When my free ones are gone, I will probably order some.

Political cartoon update

Tom Toles posted the first cartoon on 10/29 and the second one today, 11/9. Pretty funny. (Click on image to enlarge)

Nerd comics

Would anyone other than a complete computer nerd get this comic? (Click on it to see it bigger)

Katamari Ball!

I just saw this Traveler's Insurance ad on TV and thought "Katamari". I love what they can do these days with computer generated images.


Wednesday, November 01, 2006

Cannibal pumpkin


Cannibal pumpkin
Originally uploaded by Plutor.
Our daughter-in-law came up with this excellent Jack O' Lantern for this Halloween. Very creative.

(Update, 11/9/06) Maureen 'fessed up that she had gotten the idea for this jack'o'lantern from this pic she saw online.


Sunday, October 29, 2006

I'm syncing over Bluetooth

I finally got my Tungsten T3 syncing with Palm Desktop on my Win XP laptop over Bluetooth. I had been trying to do it and finally found a post on the web about creating a profile on the PDA for the Bluetooth which worked and to select "Modem" on the PC and to select a pseudo COM port created to use the Bluetooth connection. Now if I could just charge the battery wirelessly, I'd be all set.

Saturday, October 21, 2006

I've found geotagging


Pretty punkins all in a row
Originally uploaded by GeoffNascar.
I have found that you can geotag a photo in Flickr to show where it was taken. I love this. I was actually thinking recently that putting GPS into a digital camera would allow you to do this automatically. I also see that Flickr will detect geotagging data in EXIF data in a photo which was tagged somewhere else. So it makes sense that a camera should be able to do this.

Friday, October 13, 2006

Breakfast in Ogunquit


Breakfast
Originally uploaded by GeoffNascar.
Pieter and Nicole came to America this week and we went on a tour of New England with them. We had great weather until the last day, when it clouded up and rained a bit. Ellyn and I got to do some kayaking and the kayaks were great storage for bringing back the loot from shopping.

Tuesday, October 03, 2006

Conservatives only think with half their brains.

Find the money? For crying out loud, we HAD the money before the numb-nuts Republicans got into office and tossed it to the four winds with rebates and tax cuts. We had the budget and the deficit under control under Clinton and all that was shit-canned in 2000. We would also have a lot more money if we were not throwing it by the truck-loads down the rathole known as "Bushes Dirty War". If we want to "vote all these things in", we have to first vote all the Republicans OUT!

(Update: 11/9/06) DONE! YAY!

Monday, October 02, 2006

Yom Kippur in Boston



We are spending the High Holy Days in the Boston area at Temple Shir Tikva. Rabbi Gold is much more inspiring to us than anything we could get in Danbury. Plus, we get to worship with Brian.

Saturday, September 30, 2006

History Lesson?

Not a good post title but here goes. On Thursday I was working at the home of one of our business clients who owns an insurance agency. We had done some work on his office machines and he hired us (CM/IT, specifically me) to fix his daughter's laptop (severely hijacked) and his Vaio minitower. I was sitting at the kitchen table and his two younger kids were getting ready to go outside and I commented to his youngest daughter about the logo on her shirt, which had the shape of a famous ice cream company but it said "Frozen-Assets" with to dots (a german umlaut) over the "o". She said it was the name of her Nanna's boat. I mentioned how it looked like the Haagen-Dazs logo and she and her brother both said "Yeah, our Great-grandfather founded Haagen-Dazs". "Eh?", I retorted. "Yeah and I was named after him", said the brother, Reuben. "But he sold it to Pillsbury". "For a lot of money, I bet". "Yeah".

I mentioned it to their Mother later and it was her Grandfather, Reuben Mattus, who founded Haagen-Dazs. I meet some interesting people in this job.

Wednesday, September 27, 2006

Job crisis

So I suddenly got a job offer from a company I interviewed with last winter called and offered me a fulltime, 2 month contract job at Praxair in Danbury. Although the hourly rate was less than I was getting at CM/IT, it would be a guaranteed 40 hours/week for 2 months with a possibility of an extension beyond that, and, if it was not extended, there was an 80% chance the hiring company would pull me back into their organization. I would have a choice of full or part time then. Sounded pretty good, especially since I had not been getting very many hours with CM/IT lately.

When I talked with Sandra about it, she started talking about different projects she could put me into and started offering not only more hours, but a guaranteed 20 hours/week. Guess she thought I was valuable. Truth is, I like working for CM/IT and have created a relationship with my clientele so I decided to stay. Pretty dumb, huh?

I also wanted to keep some flexibility in my daily schedule. I will have to book some office time when I am not scheduled for any clients to make up the 20 weekly hours but I don't mind that.

Tuesday, September 19, 2006

T. M. X. Elmo


Ten years after "Tickle-me Elmo", the latest incarnation does acrobatics. We saw this guy on GMA this morning and everyone was really laughing at him. He sits down, bangs his hand on the floor, lies on his back, lies on his stomach, and, at the end of his fit, stands back up on his feet.

Friday, September 15, 2006

Star Trek TOS Updated!


Wow! They are returning TOS to TV with new digitally mastered special effects. I have got to see this. I checked it out on the TiVo and found two episodes on G4 on Saturday but not sure if they are the updated ones. Guess I will find out.

What about Daddy?


This is so cute! I would be tempted to buy it just to see what they put in it. Actually there are some sample pages. Hits the Conservatives right where they live. I can't imagine what a similar book called "Why Daddy is a Republican" would contain. But here is a possible list for them to start with.

Able and Baker

This comic is very funny. Thanks to Brian for putting me on to it.

Wednesday, September 13, 2006

Manbag?

Manbag

So I got tired of having to chase all over for all my stuff before leaving the house to go on a job. Cell phone, Bluetooth earpiece, GPS, XM radio, iPod, PDA, headphones, I was always forgetting something. So I dug around in the attic and found this discarded leather bag of Ellyn's which didn't look too "girly" and was a good size to hold everything. Is it too "hip" for a 57-year-old? Am I too late for this trend? Has it already passed?

Friday, September 08, 2006

Woo-hoo! Free PDA!

Woo-hoo! Free PDA!
Tungsten T3. A nice perk for an IT job well done.

So I was working at a business here in Danbury which I had worked at before, fixing some problems they had and configuring some new software. I had seen that they had a couple of PDAs around and had heard that they were unused. They currently only used the desktop software for keeping schedules and contact lists and they wanted to view the same DB from the two computers. While I was working I asked the owner if he ever used the Tungsten. I had already checked and seen that the battery was dead. He said he bought them but never used them. I also asked if he had the sync cord. He said it might be around somewhere. So I asked him if he would be willing to sell it. I had been thinking of getting a new one, since I had been using Ellyn's old IBM Workpad for several years now.

So I asked what he wanted for it. He wasn't sure how much he paid for it or what it would be worth. I checked on eBay and they covered a pretty wide spectrum of prices. I told him I would give him $30 and he seemed hesitant, so I tried $50. He told me to haggle it out with his secretary.

So after he was gone and I was ready to leave, I gave my card to the secretary and have her charge me the $40 we had finally settled on. She started, then gave me back the card and said to just take it, that I had done a lot of work for them and he would never miss it.

It is missing its sync cable but they can be had pretty inexpensively plus it works in Ellyn's Zire cradle, which is how I charged it and synched over my Workpad data.

Tuesday, September 05, 2006

Our anniversary party

The 20th anniversary living in Danbury party went over very well. Everyone did not come at once but spaced out very nicely over the day and the weather cooperated very well. After several days of rain, it broken Sunday morning and the sun was actually out for a lot of the day. There seemed to be plenty of food for everyone and there was a lot of schmoozing and visiting going on. We even got to meet a few of our neighbors. Logan and Brian were here from Saturday afternoon until Monday morning. We got a great picture to supplement the one we took 20 years ago in front of our new (at that time) house.

Sunday, August 27, 2006

If only

Friday, August 25, 2006

Surprising Covers

Today on XM radio, I heard Neil Diamond's Kentucky Woman covered by Deep Purple. Ouch!

Wednesday, August 23, 2006

Sunday, August 20, 2006

How did we get so lucky

For the second time recently, I heard about one of our friends whose kids have, for the most part, disowned them, or visa versa. Neither Ellyn nor I can believe that they have accepted this. We are relatively close to our kids, and also to our siblings and parents, for the most part, and if we were not, it would be very tragic. I am not sure what it is that we did right during "the dark years" of Logan and Brian's up-bringing (just kidding of course, which might be it), but we certainly have not disowned them and, I think, they not us, and we are very interested in everything that is going on in their lives and are always glad to see them or hear from them when we get the chance.

I gave my Dad a call on Friday because it was his 81st birthday and I think he was glad to hear from me. We didn't have much to talk about because I just saw him last month, but it was a nice call and I will do it again sometime before the end of the year.

Wednesday, August 16, 2006

Kick-ass rock guitarists - Robin Trower


robin trower lyrics


a - z LYRICS

Speaking of back to school...

...how about this shot from 1990 of Logan and Brian heading back to school?

Image hosted by Webshots.com
by geoff0522

Monday, August 14, 2006

Back to School


I'm glad we don't have to go through the "back to school" drill any more.

Hard work

Well, I have finished pouring the floor to our new shower, and it looks pretty good, if I do say so myself. I need to get the tile guy in to take a look and let me know if I need to correct any possible problems before they come in on 8/23 to start setting tile.

The shower floor Trowling out

Monday, August 07, 2006

Good product naming

Assos Women's H F.I. Lady Cycling Shorts

I was a baaaaad boy.


So the good news is that our 11-year-old van with 165,000 miles on it, which I have been somewhat lax about keeping up to date on its maintenance, passed its CT emissions test. Whew! Now we can renew its registration. The bad news is, it will be due again in about 1 1/2 years, since I was about 6 months delinquent in getting it tested. Oops. Now we will probably also have to cough up another $20 in fines for doing it late.

Friday, August 04, 2006

Fix ups

After 20 years, we have new garage doors. The old ones had started rotting out. I had painted them twice and took out glass windows (after Brian put his hand through one while playing hockey in the driveway), put in wood, then took out the wood and put in plexiglass. I also backed Ellyn's car into one of them from the inside. So it was time for some nice, new, tightly sealed and insulated doors. They look nice. And they will never need painting.




Now I just have to fix the broken siding from the hockey playing in the driveway.

Thursday, August 03, 2006

Bang, Pow, Bam!

So I'm working on Wednesday in an industrial part of Georgetown and the power goes out. The person there says it has been happening a lot because there is some construction going on. She checks with the CL&P guy outside and he turns it right back on. Then, about 15 minutes later, it goes off again. But this time we also hear some banging sounds in the outside wall. We listen for a while and then realize they are coming from outside the window. We look and there is an electrical wire hanging down in the street doing St. Vitus' dance in the street, with sparks shooting all over the place. Luckily (ha!) there is a CL&P truck right down the street, with its cherry picker...um...up. Hmm. So we run into the next office and look up the side of the building to where the wired used to attach. there is a flaming stub of wire where the dummy in the truck (allegedly) sheered it off. Oops. So I guess my job there was over and everyone else's, for a while at least. As I left the CL&P guy was in his truck talking with someone, I guess to order more wire.

I started my second blog

I am trying an experiment. I am going to use my new blog, "Blog This!", to post stuff that angers me each day. I am hoping it will work as an outlet for my anger. Not that I get angry all that often but I'll bet there is at least one thing I see, hear, or experience each day that will warrant a post.

Tuesday, August 01, 2006

Fallout

Well, maybe we have some fallout from Ellyn's laptop dousing. The fan that cools her processor has died.



I sent for a new one. Hope it comes fast. The laptop will not start up without it.