
Journal Journal: Out of the fire, into the frying pan? 1
Well, as of the end of last month, I no longer live in New England. I'm still in the same time zone.
I went from one Commonwealth to another.
Well, as of the end of last month, I no longer live in New England. I'm still in the same time zone.
I went from one Commonwealth to another.
Myself, I am fortunate enough to be able to work from home, so that is not a problem. I know several of my friends in Meat Space aren't quite as fortunate.
How are you all passing the time?
I started off 2018 by finally getting my Amateur Radio license. I went in with nothing and came out with General class.
I finished the year by going for Amateur Extra, and I passed. I was a little surprised, but it took a lot of work to learn what I needed to know for the exam.
What's that got to do with the title? Simple: The tests prove that I know a certain amount of a few topics. That's "the more you know". The rest of it is demonstrated by a common phrase in Radio: "Now, the real learning begins."
I'd like to get involved with emergency communication (look up "ARES" if you're curious) and try my hand at building antennas. I have a few in the queue and one in progress for the 2m band, so we'll see how it goes.
Take that however you wish.
I was given a Yaesu FT-450D as an early birthday/Christmas gift. (My dad and step mom can be cool that way, though I do admit that this was a bit much.)
That means I have to figure out a scheme for an antenna that works for my property, that I can get put into place with a minimum of hassle. I have just shy of a half acre, but it's the layout of the buldings, trees, and a buried (but filled-in) septic tank I have to deal with.
Last week I went to a local Amateur Radio club and took the Technician Class test. I passed it.
Then I took the General Class test. I passed that.
I didn't even try for Extra. Not yet.
I expected to pass Technician, but I was (pleasantly) surprised to pass the General.
I get my call sign later this week.
This one is Security+.
I bought the voucher last March and kept putting off taking the actual exam. I don't like exams as a general rule, and I like them less if I don't really know what to expect.
Resume candy for the next three years. Yay.
I finally gathered the nerve to try to boot up my Apple IIgs for the first time in about 12 years.
A few of the connectors on the system are corroded, but not horribly so. This is not really surprising, as it has spent a large part of the last 12 years in a musty cellar.
The only part missing right now is the keyboard itself. It got misplaced during a move, but I'm pretty sure where it is. (I've actually got its location narrowed down to two or three places.)
At any rate, I booted it up and it came up just fine. The OS is System 6.0.1 and boots off an internal hard drive I installed years ago.
The thing that impressed me the most? The system clock was actually about 40 minutes FAST. Other than that, it kept pretty good time, if you ask me.
I'm likely going to take some time tomorrow and find that keyboard. I wanna play with this again!
I was given a Kindle Fire 8HD for my birthday. It's a beautiful device. I love it.
That's the Good news.
The "bad news" is that it's supposed to come with Alexa, which I cannot get to work. At all.
The device is a Kindle Fire 8HD (7th Gen) running FireOS 5.4.0.0.
I've tried several things to get it to work, but it's just not going there.
I long-press the Home button and nothing happens. I've tried to go to Settings > Device Options, but there's no "Alexa" option to enable.
Does anyone have any experience with this sort of thing? It isn't exactly a show-stopper if Alexa never works, but if it's not going to work, I'm going to start looking for ways to remove Alexa-related software.
If it matters, I do not have a Spot or anything like it. This Kindle is it.
Suggestions would be appreciated.
My watch has bought the proverbial farm. Usually this means that the strap has broken in a way that makes it difficult (if not impossible) to repair. In this case, the strap was part of the body and it tore straight through.
Do not feel bad for my watch, as it has served me well for several years. Considering how things are made these days, I see this as a Good Thing. It is not unusual for me to replace my watch every three to five years.
At any rate, I'm on the market for a Smart Watch. I'm aiming for the US$150.00 price range. I understand the maxim of "you get what you pay for", so the el Cheapo $20 ones from China are out of the question. This being my first Smart Watch, I want to get a good idea what they are capable of doing versus what I'll actually use it for, so I don't want to drop $200 or more on it.
I'd like something that lets me change the face (analog or digital display), maybe weather updates and/or text notices are a plus.
If it matters, my phone is an Android.
Do any of you have any suggestions that I could consider?
I've been hopping Linux distros since I decided (for reasons of my own) against intentionally using systemd-based distros. I'm not interested in systemd flame wars, so don't bother here.
At any rate, I've come across SalixOS, and so far I think I like it. It's a direct Slackware derivative, which I find quite interesting because Slackware is the first distro I ever used.
Waaaaay back in the early-to-mid 1990s, my dad sent me a box of 3.5" floppies. On these floppies was Slackware Linux. I don't remember the version, but I think I have most of them kicking around still, so if I felt the need, I might dig them up and see if I can install enough to get a version number from it. What I do remember is that it had kernel version 0.99pl10 on it.
Since my introduction to Linux on Slackware, I've used Red Hat/Fedora/CentOS (professionally and personally), Debian/Devuan, Arch, and Aurora (a Red Hat derivative for use on the Sun SPARC platform), in no particular order.
It's interesting, having to find all the dependencies again and having to re-compile kernels to get something newer than what comes in the box.
In short: Nobody wants to take the blame for attempting to impeach the first $CHARACTERISTIC president. Trump has no characteristic that would possibly protect him if he screwed things up: he cannot play a race card or a sexism card. He's got nothin'.
He's got everything to lose by getting impeached and everything to gain by doing the Right Things.
Well, it looks like I'll be teaching one of my kids how to program.
To an extent, he's already familiar with some programming, as he's figured out how to program a TI calculator (not sure of the model, but it's in the 80s). Whether he understands the instructions he gives his calculator or not, I don't know. He'll know far more when I'm done.
I've decided to go with Python instead of any of several other languages available. One thing that I thought was important is that the base installation (in Linux and in Windows) has a module called "turtle". If you're old enough to remember learning Terrapin Logo or Karel (by way of Apple Pascal), then the idea behind turtle should not be foreign to you.
The idea is that you have a "turtle", a cursor that represents where all the action is going to happen. You give it instructions and depending on whether the pen is "up" or "down", it will draw as it goes. Tell it to move left, right, forward, or backward, and off it goes.
turtle is cool because its programs are really Python, whether the student realizes it or not. New functions (methods) can be created. What is drawn by the program is displayed with no hassle.
In all, it's pretty cool. I'm actually looking forward to playing around with it as I teach it to my son. Maybe one or both of the other two will become interested as well? Only one way to find out.
...to me, at least.
Does anyone else have experience with keybase.io ?
I was given an invitation to it. I've signed in and set up a couple things, but I haven't had much else to do with it so far.
I'm curious to see what others think of it. Your thoughts?
Okay... A couple weeks ago, I decided to take another look at Python-- the first such look I've given the language since around 1997.
So far, I have the basic stuff down. I've got a quick script down that provides functions to add ANSI colors to my output, so I have that going for me.
I have Python 2.x on a VM on my work system, but I'm using Python3 on my home system.
Now I need to look at learning classes and lambda (I know OF classes but I've only heard of lambda in passing), and that may take me a while.
About the time we think we can make ends meet, somebody moves the ends. -- Herbert Hoover