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Birds think I’m delicious

Posted by Photonstopper on September 1, 2008
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: birds, bite, cincinnati, lorikeet, zoo. 1 Comment

During our visit to the Cincinnati Zoo August 30, I learned that certain birds find me to be delicious. The zoo was very difficult for us to find due to apparently missing directional signs and an inaccurate map but once we got there we loved the place. Some of the birds loved me… possibly as food!

We visited the zoo's Lorikeet Landing: one of those free-flight places you can walk around inside and feed the birds seeds or "nectar" purchased from the official vendor. The birds I encountered did not seem to care that I had no purchased goodies. They liked me… a lot! Not long after entering the enclosure I was set upon by a smallish, beautifully green creature. You can see it tasting my hand below…

Taste Test
Taste Test

Next I was accosted by a rather larger and more menacing feathered beast. At first it also seemed content to sniff my hand, as if looking for treats. Finding no seeds hidden in my palm, however, the monster tried to take a finger. Again, see below…

The Attack
The Attack


Undeterred, I remained inside the danger zone and soon three more birds joined "Big Red" in the feast. The trio perched on my head and shoulders sampling my hair, ears, and skin! Horrible. Simply horrible! (A photo of that incident may never be seen.)

So if you enter a lorikeet enclosure in order to be close to the birds, beware. Look around and, if you see a bird staring at you as in the photo below, you might just want to buy some nectar and save your skin!

Menacing Stare
Menacing Stare

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Cell phone update

Posted by Photonstopper on September 1, 2008
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: alltel, cellular, cincinnati, work. 1 Comment

My hard feelings about the new cell phone have softened a bit. That's mostly because I managed to find where the "good" ringtones are stored on the phone and was able to set a synthetic ringing sound more to my liking — not rap and not some sort of electronic jitterbug! I liked the phone itself from the start though I've still to like Alltel much — I want my old phone number back and hope that may still happen. I managed to drop the new phone on asphalt pavement already. The little phone is so slim and smooth, it just slipped through my fingers and flew into a parking lot as I pulled it from my pocket. The phone still works and only got a couple of chips out of the edge of its cover. It got a workout Saturday as I handled an urgent support call from work. Thank goodness for the strong signal and clear sound so that, even whilst 250 miles away from the office and lost in Cincinnati looking for the Zoo, I was able to help someone get a vital system back online.

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This Alltel new customer’s blues

Posted by Photonstopper on August 28, 2008
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: alltel, bad service, cellular, phone, verizon, virgin mobile. 5 Comments

Life with my Virgin Mobile cell phone service was pretty good. The phone has been very reliable and easy to set up the way I liked it. It was the least expensive prepaid plan I could find but the service area was spotty and did not include a couple of places very important to me. So, since the phone's battery wasn't holding a charge as long as it used to and replacement batteries cost as much as a new phone (if you can find them), I decided to look around.

LG AX275
LG AX275

Comparing plans and service areas I settled on Alltel: not as cheap as Virgin Mobile, but the service area promised to be excellent. I picked up the new phone, a nifty LG AX275, at our Target store and after charging the battery, activated it. All went well during activation but I soon discovered that, while Virgin Mobile treats its prepay customers well and with respect, Alltel considers us second-class "citizens" in several important ways.

After thrashing around in Alltel's very unhelpful Web site I found that, while logged into my account last night, clicking on [Help] produced an empty page –no help– and there was no information on how to contact them — they didn't want to help or talk to no-account folks like me. Likewise there was no Search capability to look for an answer to my One Big Question: How can I get my Virgin Mobile phone number assigned to my new Alltel phone? {Telephone Number Portability}  After two calls, and several hand-offs between departments, it turns out Alltel won't do that for you if you don't have a Contract. Funny (not ha-ha): Virgin Mobile ported over my Verizon Wireless number –one prepaid account to another– the way they should and for less cash than Alltel will be gaining from me. Is Alltel antiquated, stupid, or stingy? I don't study these things but I thought telephone number portability was federally mandated. In any event it looks like I may be out of luck there and will have to inform everyone of my new cell phone number. Next step: a formal complaint to the FCC.

I also found that the new phone has only one wallpaper and only one ringtone –music– which I don't like. We prepay bums can't download ringtones from the Alltel Web site, only via cell phone Web access which multiplies the cost and reduces the choices dramatically. All I want is a beeping sound or a synthetic ring, not a freakin' concert!

On the "up" side, I now have very good service coverage in the area most important to me: the observatory! Now if I go there I only have to tell folks to call me at my cell phone number and don't have to provide a list of numbers, a schedule, and instructions.

Still, thanks to Alltel's policy and practice of screwing non-contract users, I'm not a happy new customer.

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Vacation begins: parade blockaid, basil pizza, and fireworks!

Posted by Photonstopper on August 25, 2008
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: fireworks, observatory, pizza, vacation. 1 Comment
Fireworks from Balcony
Fireworks from Balcony

After working Saturday, vacation sort of started today. It was, however, a good start.

There was a quick and pleasant trip to Heinen's for the week's provisions –and one donut each– followed by a drive to lovely Hudson and their annual arts festival. It was a very warm and muggy day that became a hot and muggy day. We got all sweaty just walking around looking at the beautiful artwork on display under tents in the city's downtown park. She bought a pretty pendant, I admired the paintings, and we strolled over to the charming downtown and visited the cook store.

By the time we were ready to leave we figured we would arrive back home at around 2:30 or so and run smack into a road closure affecting the entrance to our development. So we headed off to Whole Foods instead of home and picked up some beautiful produce for us and soy yogurt for She. While there She pointed at the picture on the cover of a frozen pizza box and I said, "I can make that." So the inspiration for dinner was set.

Still too early, in our estimation, to go home so we traveled to Strongsville, mostly to use up some time. Spent some money at Target. Then to Borders where I picked up a nice card and a gift for Mom, whose birthday is coming up soon. A little much-needed rain fell and drove the humidity even higher. Good to see the ground wet, though.

The time was about 4:30 so we figured we could mosey home — the road closure was for a parade being staged as part of our town's Home Days and was to have started at about 3:00. Got home a bit before 5:00 and the road was still closed. So we ducked into an apartment parking lot across from our own home and carried our goods into the house. Darned parades! This blockaid of access to and from our home happens about three times a year and we always seem to be inconvenienced by it. Do people still like parades?

So I started on dinner. The pizza dough came together easily and perfectly. I let it rise for one hour. I punched it down and stretched it to about 12-inch diameter. The beautiful homemade pesto made from home-grown organic basil (Her doing) was spread on the disk. The pesto was sprinkled with a little mozzarella. I cut fresh, ripe tomatoes into thin slices and laid them out on the presto bed. The pie slid from the peal on to the pizza stone in a 500-degree oven. Bake for 10 minutes to golden brown crust. Picked up easily on the peal without sticking to the stone at all. Served with glasses of shiraz and merlot. A lovely dinner. I came off looking like an excellent cook.

Later, around 9:40, the town festival ended with fireworks. Our balcony (aka: Chaunticlair Observatory) was an excellent vantage point for the show. It was very enjoyable with lots of colorful and unusual air bursts above neighboring roofs and trees; it was a perfect ending to an excellent day.

Vacation plans for the week start off with what won't sound like a lot of fun: She is helping her mother with some things. I'll put in a full day of work at the observatory building on a good start I made on my Friday off. Work will include (I hope) some interior painting, electrical, testing paint removal technique for the setting circle rings on the big scope, maybe some landscape cleanup and even a visit to the archives!. May not sound like fun to you but I'm excited to have figured out some things there and to be ready to make more progress.

We also plan  to do some things that will sound more like vacation fun.

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Howie is home

Posted by Photonstopper on August 12, 2008
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: cat, cincinnati, holiday inn, howie. 2 Comments
Holiday Inn Howie
Holiday Inn Howie

Howie at Home
Howie at Home

Good news came in the form of an email yesterday. "Howie," the homeless house cat I encountered during a weekend stay in Cincinnati a couple of months back, has been adopted. The cat rescue person who picked him up, took him to the vet, and then provided a foster home, adopted him out to a nice couple last Friday. There are some awfully good people out there. Thanks, Afshan and company. You're angels!

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August Gloom

Posted by Photonstopper on August 10, 2008
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: august, clouds, gloom, sky. 1 Comment
August Gloom
August Gloom

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Just another manic Sunday

Posted by Photonstopper on August 6, 2008
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: art, astronomy, erie, lake, observatory, wilderness center, work. 3 Comments
Lake Erie Scene
Lake Erie Scene

Friday was set aside to take a trip to The Wilderness Center in Wilmot, Ohio where I would be given a somewhat behind-the-scenes look at their Astronomy Building. Members of the Center's astronomy club were very generous with their time and information. It was a nice trip down under partly-cloudy skies but we couldn't look through their magnificent telescope because of developing overcast and sprinkles of rain! Of course the sky cleared after we left. Grrrrrrr…..

We had a lazy day Saturday and did a little exploring. We checked out the annual Lakewood Art Festival, held on a closed street of that Cleveland suburb. Then we set out for Huntington Beach Park in nearby Bay Village, Ohio. Along the way we stopped at a tiny lakefront park to admire and photograph the amazing colors we saw in Lake Erie. It was good to have a lazy day if for no other reason than to get ready for the next day's hard work.

Sunday I worked for 15 hours straight removing old and installing new computers. It was a lot of work but much easier to do with the place closed! Even at this writing I'm still working on the project, though now changing out a few computers at a time instead of 20 systems in one session. Yeah, 15 hours is a long work day but the last time I did a leased computer swap-out at work I worked for 24 hours straight –yes, 24 hours awake and working– and had no sleep for a longer time than that! I got a bit smarter over the ensuing years and figured some ways to make the job easier this time. I hope to take some time off soon to recover but we still have a meeting room out of commission, in use now as my warehouse and workroom, and I have to empty it this week.

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Saturday night at the convention

Posted by Photonstopper on July 27, 2008
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: caa, jupiter, telescope, washing machine. 3 Comments
Letha Sunset
Letha Sunset

The 2008 edition of the Cuyahoga Astronomical Association's OTAA Convention saw good attendance and an enthusiastic crowd Saturday evening. While attendees enjoyed themselves, however, the hot and muggy conditions were well suited to creating the hazy and cloudy skies that dominated the evening's events.

Case Western Reserve University's Department of Astronomy Chair Heather Morrison was keynote speaker. She delivered a talk on current research and exciting new results coming from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey; it was entitled "The Four-Dimensional Galaxy and the Square Telescope." {The Sloan instrument is a reflector design housed inside a square wind baffle making it appear to be a square telescope.}

Waiting for Dark
Waiting for Dark

The ever-popular raffle took place after dinner. Prizes ranged from shirts and gift certificates to software and an Orion Aristocrat Executive desktop telescope. I won the brass telescope! Though intended mainly as a desk piece, it's actually very nice! I hope to try it out tonight on Jupiter. So what if it's a "beginner's scope" — it's probably better than what Galileo had! I'm happy to have won the grand prize though the Vixen eyepieces were awfully nice…..

Many individuals brought telescopes with them, "just in case," but only a couple were actually assembled in the field. One belonged to a CAA member whose mammoth long-tube 8-inch refractor {pictured here} impresses everyone who sees it. Turns out it's a darned good telescope, besides!

As night fell a few "sucker holes" opened up in the sky revealing brighter stars and brilliant Jupiter. Through Wiersma's refractor viewers could easily see Jupiter's major cloud bands with hints of other detail and the four Galilean moons resolved to disks. It's a fine telescope I've seen many times before but never got to use.

Clouds soon filled in most of the holes and many attendees went home. It was, however, a good night and despite the cloudy skies, most folks left smiling.

Orion Aristocrat
Orion Aristocrat

In Other News: Today (Sunday) we took delivery of a grand new washing machine. Our old Maytag Neptune fried a circuit board that would have cost hundreds to replace. We picked out a new, rather pricey, Kenmore He model that we've already used and are falling in love with…. well, whatever it is that you do when you decide you really appreciate a major appliance. Tomorrow it's back to work and the kickoff of yet another IT project to be followed by another, then another….. Job security, I guess!

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“The Last Lecture” author Randy Pausch dies

Posted by Photonstopper on July 26, 2008
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: book, randy pausch. 1 Comment
Randy Pausch
Randy Pausch

Every few days, after seeing the YouTube video of his lecture, then reading his book, I wondered if computer scientist Randy Pausch was still alive. In the spring I'd read on Wikipedia that, after a period of "quiet," his cancer had spread. Later I saw an article noting Pausch was confined to bed. This morning I stumbled across the news that he died yesterday.

I didn't know Randy Pausch, at least I'd never met him. Reading his book, however, leaves one with the impression that they knew the man and how much he loved his family and loved living. It's not a masterpiece of modern literature. Nor is The Last Lecture a "tell-all" biography full of seamy slop. As Pausch described it, The Last Lecture –both as presented before an audience and as a best-selling book– is a "message in a bottle" for his three children. Both are meant as a way of telling them who their dad was.

So though I never met him I'm saddened to learn that one more good soul is lost from our world. My sympathies go out to his family, friends, and the many whose lives he touched.

From the news service* obituary….

by Los Angeles Times Staff Writer Valerie J. Nelson

Randy Pausch, a terminally ill professor whose earnest farewell lecture at Carnegie Mellon University became an Internet phenomenon and bestselling book that turned him into a symbol for living and dying well, died Friday. He was 47.

Pausch, a computer science professor and virtual-reality pioneer, died at his home in Chesapeake, Va., of complications from pancreatic cancer, the Pittsburgh university announced.

*As published in the Chicago Tribune

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A lazy day

Posted by Photonstopper on July 20, 2008
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: anise, anise hyssop, butterfly, half-price books, mushrooms, swallowtail, tiny schrooms. 3 Comments
Tiny 'Shrooms
Tiny ‘Shrooms

We expected a hot, muggy, stormy day. What we got was warm and humid day that was quite tolerable, even pleasant, with no storms at all! So we passed the morning quietly at home and, after lunch, headed out to Great Northern shopping center for a quick walk-around and a visit to the nearby Half-Price Books. At the book store we both found treasures we could not (or would not) pass by: she in cookery, I in astronomy of course. We both regretted not being a bit more active out-of-doors but did enjoy a quiet, lazy day and a little exploration along the way. Even at that, we spotted some beauty both indoors and out!

Swallowtail on Anise Hyssop
Swallowtail on Anise Hyssop

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