Tuesday, December 31, 2013

Ah, the Good Ol' Days of OV to WinHelp

From: me

Good point Paula – and I totally agree that retyping may be easier in some cases. I wasn’t trying to make a blanket statement that my guestimate of 1 hour would apply to Carrie’s content.

In fact, now that you mention it and I reread my post, there was no way you could have known that I was remembering 10+ years ago when I worked for a different employer. One of my projects was to convert hundreds of OfficeVision (an AS/400 word processor) documents to Word / WinHelp. That was when I ended up with a master.cnt file and 100 .hlp files, when it was all said and done. I don’t know if you remember that, but a lot – and I mean A LOT – of people on HATT helped me through that conversion, like Char, Rick Stone, Paul O’Rear, Bill Swallow, and you. <grin> Please, don’t be insulted if I didn’t specify you in that impromptu list!

During that conversion, there was a wide range of page lengths. Some of the existing documents were really short – a page – but those counterbalanced the ones that were 50+ pages. I’m remembering a specific existing 65 page doc that was part of that conversion. It had not only content about the menu options that were on the screen, but bundled with it, there were implementation procedures of let’s say 6 steps each. The system I was working with was for a billing system used by telecommunication companies and this specific one had 15 menu options. One of the things I was also dealing with was cleaning up garbage like:

“To run the <State_Name_Calling_Plan> menu option, the user must have authority granted by your system administrator or another authorized user, if you don’t have a system administrator. Running the <State_Name_Calling_Plan> menu option requires that the user has an authority record set up through the Authority Maintenance menu option, which is conveniently located on the System Controls menu. If the user does not have access to the System Controls menu, the user cannot access the Authority Maintenance menu option to set up authority for this menu option – it must be granted by your system administrator or another authorized user, if you don’t have a system administrator. The <State_Name_Calling_Plan> menu option cannot be run during the Billing Cycle. Consult the documentation provided about the Billing Cycle to determine when the <State_Name_Calling_Plan> menu option should be run and what menu options must be run before the user can run the <State_Name_Calling_Plan> menu option. ”

Can you hear that blurb screaming, “Rewrite me! Please! Save me from this dribble! Create snippets about the <State_Name_Calling_Plan> menu option, about Authority Maintenance, about the System Controls menu, and about the Billing Cycle! Please! I’m begging!” I wish I had that source file available to look at, but it’s on a CD-R at my former employer. Cleaning up junk like that is why I wrote, “you guestimate that on average, it will take you 1 hour to convert each “chunk” to your new tool. You came up with that number because you have several long topics that will counterbalance several small topics that will take minutes to convert.”

Anyways, that’s where my head was at when I responded to Carrie’s post.

Happy New Year! We are planning to watch “Grown Ups 2” with our 17 year-old daughter, her friend that is a boy, and our 15 year-old son. BTW, if anyone saw GU2 and thought it was awful – it’s on a bunch of “Worst Films of 2013” lists – feel free to save me! At 44, it’s safe to say my “out all New Year’s Eve” times are over.
<snip>

From: Paula R. Stern

<snip>
The first question is why it would take an hour to convert a chunk of information? If that were true, you could type that chunk faster into a new tool than that estimate. If you really think it would take that long to go from any tool to any tool, that's what I would suggest you do – just go type it over again, given that a chunk really shouldn't be longer than a page (and often less).

Without commenting on what tool goes to what tool – most content can be imported in far less time than one hour per topic/chunk. Honestly, if it would take that long, you could probably export it to PDF (takes minutes); export that to Word – with the latest Acrobat version, what you get isn't that bad - and then import it into RoboHelp, Flare, whatever.

We are in the process of moving one client to RoboHelp – they are using Doxygen at one daughter-company; LaTeX at another. As part of the rebranding, we just took PDFs from each of these outputs, exported that to Word and reformatted it properly according to the new template. A 100 page document (probably around 200 chunks of information/topics), took us less than 5 hours to import and reformat. Importing it to RoboHelp shouldn't take more than 5 hours once it has been properly formatted – if that.

So, I estimate 10 hours – let's double it for argument's sake and to make the math easier. So – 10 hours to import 200 topics comes to 20 topics an hour, or 3 minutes per topic.

Using your equation of 1,000 topics – we're talking 50 hours – or $2,500 – even doubling that – you still come to $5,000. The learning curve for some applications is longer than that. Again, this is a real life, just done example of moving from PDF to a help authoring tool – in this case RoboHelp, though I have no doubt Flare would be just as fast.

I agree that going into AuthorIT would take much longer and be more complicated but if the direction is AuthorIT to RoboHelp (or Flare), honestly, piece of cake.
<snip>

From: Rhonda Bracey

Spot on Paul. And don’t forget the cost of training, and perhaps getting in a consultant to help set up new templates etc. for the new tool. Back in 2009 I wrote a blog post on just this – I still think it’s as relevant today as it was then: http://cybertext.wordpress.com/2009/02/16/the-real-cost-of-new-software/
<snip>

From: Me

<snip>
I realize I am chiming in a bit late, but I wanted to point out the ‘hidden cost’ to converting from one tool to another - the total number of hours you will spend just to get from your current tool to your new tool.

I am using the numbers in this example because I suck at math and I’m knee deep in work so bear with me.

Let’s say your hourly rate, whether you are salary or not, is $50 / hour. That’s the number your employer uses for calculating its salary budget. Further, let’s say in your existing documentation, you have 1000 topics or chunks of text that need to be converted from AIT to RH, Flare, whatever. Further, after analyzing your content, you guestimate that on average, it will take you 1 hour to convert each “chunk” to your new tool. You came up with that number because you have several long topics that will counterbalance several small topics that will take minutes to convert.

So, with your 1000 hours of work, multiply that by your hourly rate ($50) and you get a conversion “cost” of $50,000 and after your employer spends $50,000, they will *just* have your existing content transferred from one tool to another. There won’t be any “normal” updates of your content. The newest feature that all your customers are begging for? It won’t be included. The new topics you are planning to write based upon your Support department’s Top 10 Questions We’re Asked on a Daily Basis – those won’t be done. You will simply have the exact same content you have now but instead of opening AIT, you will open RH, Flare, or whatever.

And, if you fire up your calculator and divide 1000 hours by 40 hours, you’re looking at 25 – 40 hour work weeks that will be spent converting and, really, how many of us spend 40 hours only on a single task? It’s never been realistic in my nearly 18 years of being a technical writer.

Good luck with your situation - I hope it works out well for you. Please keep the list informed of what you end up doing!
<snip>

From: Carrie Zinck

Thank you all for your advice regarding the switch. I’m very interested to see how many of you suggested Flare as a better solution. As I finish this comparison matrix, I’m going to add Flare to the list and see if that might be a better compromise.

I so appreciate you all!

Monday, December 30, 2013

Please Press Pause to Continue

I don't plan an exhaustive rundown on all of the highlights / lowlights of 2013.

Highlights of 2013

  1. Reaching our 20 year wedding anniversary.
  2. Reaching 3 years / 1096 days sober.
  3. Seeing the following in person:
    • The Harlem Globetrotters at the iWireless Center with the entire family
    • Shinedown / Three Days Grace / POD at the iWireless Center with Kevin
    • Multiple Iowa Hawkeye basketball games with Alex
    • Shinedown / Skillet / Papa Roach / In This Moment /We as Human at the US Cellular Center with Alex
    • Multiple Iowa Hawkeye football games with Alex
    • Saxon & others in Cedar Falls with Kevin
    • Bayside in Des Moines with Megan
    • Gene Hoglan drum clinic with Alex
  4. Playing not one, but TWO gigs with Lou's Classic Ride.
  5. Completing another excellent year at my employer.
  6. Achievements of the kids: 
    • Alex earning a spot on the Iowa City West freshman basketball team 
    • Megan earning a spot on the Iowa Ambassadors of Music European tour.

Likely Highlights of 2014

  1. Reaching our 21 year wedding anniversary.
  2. Reaching 4 years / 1461 days sober.
  3. Seeing the following in person:
    • Skillet & others at the iWireless Center with Alex
    • Bayside, if they add an Iowa date in 2014 with Megan
    • Metallica, if they tour *anywhere* close to Iowa.
  4. Playing more than two gigs with Lou's Classic Ride
  5. Completing another excellent year at my employer
  6. Achievements of the kids: 
    • Alex making the Iowa City West sophomore basketball team. 
    • Megan going on tour in Europe with the Iowa Ambassadors of Music tour in July 2014
  7. Completing the reconversion of my 4000ish CDs

Lowlights of 2013

  1. Numerous funerals and wakes
  2. Experiencing a hard drive failure with my 63,000+ music files
  3. Not producing music reviews
  4. Not seeing friends nearly enough
    • not an exhaustive list, but off the top of my head
      • Serbi
      • Brian Rock
      • James
      • JR 
      • Phl
      • BSS
      • Kevin
      • Todd Eadie
      • John / Yvonne
      • Bill / Debbie
      • Dave / Cindy
      • any member of the MMC group

Sunday, December 29, 2013

Recent Bayside News

One of my favorite bands, Bayside, announced some tour dates in 2014. The closest possibility I have in seeing them on this tour - they do not have a date currently scheduled in Iowa - is Saturday, March 8, 2014 in Chicago. The likelihood of me going to that show is somewhere below zero so, in the meantime, I can just watch this video.

Back in Business

  1. Foreword
    • The holidays are now behind my family and I. We went to Balltown on Christmas Eve. I started this blog post yesterday and was going to post up to #5, but it has turned out, instead, to be a much longer post. I suppose I could split up each day into its own post if I wanted to artificially inflate the number of posts for the month. 
  2. Christmas Eve (Tuesday)
    • Santa was very good to me. I got the Bourne trilogy on DVD, which I started watching with Jonathan & Tyler. Karen also gave me a pair of running pants and Iowa hooded sweatshirt as well as the wireless keyboard I'm typing on right now. It's a tradition to get a Christmas tree ornament and mine was a miniature KISS lunch box that I plan to use for storing loose change instead of actually putting it on the tree.
    • For Karen, I bought a $50 iTunes gift card and a keyboard that lights up for her iPad. I was very nervous and fearful that a gift card would be considered "not putting thought into her present" but it worked out fine. I was happy.
    • The kids were given gifts, but went to bed disappointed because they thought they were getting iPods for Christmas. We gave them other presents on Christmas Eve.
  3. Christmas Day (Wednesday)
    • We all got up and went to 8 AM Mass at Balltown. Church was not crowded. 
    •  During the Sigwarth gift exchange, I ended up with a transparent scarf, a pearl necklace, and a bottle of lotion. I started joking that the scarf was a shirt for Karen and that I would give her a pearl necklace, and that the lotion was aphrodisiac lotion. It was funny.
    • At night, Louie had a cold / cough so he went to bed. That left Mark, Susie, Jean, Karen, and I to play Shanghai rummy and then horse deal, a card game where you bet. I don't really like horse deal and kind of whined about playing it. At the end of the game, though, I made $1.30, which was ironic because I didn't want to play it in the first place. Jean called me a "hog" because I won that much. That same night, Mark and I watched some episodes of "Duck Dynasty" before calling it a night.
  4. 12/26/2013 (Thursday)
    • The Great Political Discussion took place between Louie and I. 
      • For reasons I don't fully comprehend, Louie and I got into a long 30+ minute discussion about politics and the state of the Republican Party. As someone that enjoys stimulating conversation, I really enjoyed the point-counterpoint nature of our conversation. I liked how I was able to formulate an argument/point and get Louie to either agree or concede that what I was saying made sense to him. You see, Louie is about as Conservative as they come. He is still under the belief that Elvis started the downfall of modern culture. He talked about how it used to be that you worked at the same employer and when you retired, they took care of you because you had been loyal to them. I pointed out that that era is over. Technology is taking away jobs and people don't stay at the same place for their entire careers. 
      • When I said that, I was thinking about how the employer I worked for a dozen years serves companies that are providing, among other services, landline telephone service to their customers. One of the three reasons I left that employer is because I felt that the market was shrinking and I didn't see a way for that market to exist in a decade or even less than a decade.  
    • After the Great Political Debate, we played cards. 
    • After playing cards, we went to see Lou's sister, Alice, at Stonehill nursing home and sing Christmas carols. 
      • On our way out of Stonehill, there was a door open to a resident's room and what I saw made me realize I am human. A woman was in a bed and she looked like she was not breathing well. She looked like she was in pain, as she slept. I felt really sad for her. 
        • Jonathan noticed I paused as I went by her room and commented that he felt bad for her. 
      • It made me realize that someday, I will be old and someday I may look like that. I don't necessarily like nursing homes in the first place, but to then see someone like that, who *looks* like they don't have a high quality of life just makes me not like nursing homes even less. I hate the idea of all my life being confined to a room the size of the den I'm sitting in and not really doing anything except waiting to die. I don't want to 'go out' like that. I don't want to push myself in a wheelchair or not be able to take care of my self when I have to poop or pee. I don't want to walk around with a walker that has tennis balls on the bottom so that the walker slides across the linoleum.I don't want Megan or Alex or anyone, for that matter, to come visit me and to talk about 'the good ol' days' when I wasn't in a nursing home. I'd rather just be in a car accident or have a massive heart attack or something quick so that I don't sit there, trapped in my own body, waiting to die.
    • After Stonehill, we went to Happy Joe's in Dubuque for supper. The pizza was good, but we were seated next to the video games and the window where you can stand and watch pizzas be made. There was a large group of kids, ages 2 - 4 (my guess) and they were LOUD! They were having a good time, but it was clear that the parents of these kids were not being parents.
  5. 12/27/2013 (Friday)
    • We left Balltown for North Liberty later than I wanted to, but it worked out fine. After getting the truck unloaded, I was strong-armed into playing Pictionary when Megan's boyfriend, Logan, came over. It was really kind of awkward because it's not a lot you can do with a fifth person. Eventually, I grew tired of being "all time timekeeper" and "all time guesser" and went and sat on the couch. My intention to have Karen model the shirt I won in the Sigwarth gift exchange flew out the window when I got really tired and fell asleep on the couch. I guess I was anti-social, but driving home took a lot more out of me than I realized.
  6. 12/28/2013 (Saturday)
    • We watched Aron, John and Sarah's 2 year-old son. He is a cutie. He will sit and watch Star Wars and be mesmerized by what he sees on the screen. I think it is flipping awesome.
    • After we watched Aron, we went to Fred and Julie's for conversation. Mark and Mary Kurth were there too. We were there for about 3 hours.
    • When we got back and settled, it was nearly 11 PM. I rented Elysium from South Slope. I liked it to the extent that I understood what it was trying to say about taking care of Mother Earth and about being good citizens to each other. The plot is that all the rich people leave Earth and live on a space station that orbits it. On Elysium, there is no cancer or illness, but on Earth, it's really bad. The director of District 9 directed this movie and there were a lot of similarities in the way it was filmed. I am kind of glad the DVR, for some reason, doesn't allow you to pause because I think it skipped over a scene where there was probably graphic surgery. I know movies are fake but this surgery that they were going to do? It looked like it was going to be VERY real. I ended up staying awake, watching it, until 1 AM.
  7. 12/29/2013 (Sunday)
    • I was wide awake at 7:15 AM and came down to the den to continue the reconversion.
    • The agenda for today includes a trip to Cedar Rapids. 
      • We are going to 11 AM Mass at Saint Thomas More. 
        • I have not played drums during Mass for over 2 months and have no reason to believe the trend will end today.
      • I'm not entirely sure what the timetable for today is, at the moment, as far as who we are going to see first. It doesn't really matter to me, I guess. It's the time of excursion on a Sunday I know I have to do, but it's not all that joyous or exciting to do. Both items on the agenda (seeing Dad, seeing Mom) have to do with the end of their time on Earth.
        • When we see Dad, he wants to go over where he keeps all his financial information so that, when he dies, I know where every thing is located. Personally, I want Karen to hear all that he tells me, just so I have her to rely upon to make sure I understand all that is said to me. 
        • When we see Mom, it's basically visiting a shell of the woman that raised me. When Megan and I went up to see her a couple of weeks ago, I liked that when she saw me, she smiled. Other than that, I don't like visiting her and it's not because I don't want to visit Mom, as a person, but she is not my mother, if that makes sense. My mom had a Master's degree and taught kids to read for 40+ years. The woman I visit at the facility where she lives now is not that woman. The woman I visit can't construct a sentence, can't say my name, and has a left hand that is crumpled. I find it very ironic that she can't use her left hand because all her life, she was left handed. The room she sleeps in has no inkling of her personality - it doesn't have pictures or anything. It simply has a bed that is provided by the facility.
    •  When we get back from Cedar Rapids, I am not entirely sure what we are going to do. I would like to continue with the reconversion. I have one of the Elkader PCs running Windows Media Player because my other primary laptop's CD player doesn't seem to want to work today. 
      • I am considering trying to get a second PC (one of 4 towers that are currently idle in the den) running so that I can be ripping 2 CDs at the same time, but I don't think I have a second functioning PC. 
        • The larger issue is I don't have the room, physically, in the den to set that up so that I could have multiple keyboards functioning at the same time. At work, I had bid on a metal desk with a return, but the way it has turned out, I am glad I didn't bring it home. While it would have been so nice to have it so that I would have the physical workspace area to have multiple PCs ripping CDs at the same time, we need the space in the den for the occasional air mattress. 
      • According to the schedule I made for the reconversion, I should be complete with Spindles #3 & #4 by December 31, 2013 but, and this doesn't make a lot of sense to me, starting Spindle #5 today and finishing it by January 5th, 2014.  Only being able to rip a single CD at a time is slowing me down. That schedule also didn't take into account that I was in Balltown. I had thought about taking the laptop to Balltown to work on the conversion, but as things played out, I really didn't have any time to work on it. 
      • We do have a Toshiba laptop and I'd get that going, but I'm not really wanting to do anything with that laptop at the present moment. I need to make sure I have all the files I need off of it and then I am going to get it reset to the factory default settings. There is a lot of junk that needs to be blown away. Essentially, the problem is that junk and crap was downloaded to it because I didn't make the kids non-admin users. I gave everyone admin rights and that has resulted in a junky laptop.
  8. Epilogue
    • As 2013 winds down, I realize that I have a lot on my plate and I don't see that ending anytime soon. I look forward to the days, weeks, and months ahead. I don't consider this my final post of the year - I'm simply summarizing the post.

Monday, December 23, 2013

Sunday, December 22, 2013

Change in Status

This is to document that on Saturday, December 21, 2013, I accepted a change in my relationship with Dailyvault.com. Jason, the editor, emailed me and in a very nice way, pointed out that I had contributed 3 CD reviews in 2013. That doesn't include the concert reviews I wrote but the gist is the same - my productivity was shit. I have excuses and reasons, both, for my lack of volume and only one word to describe it: disappointing. The year has been a series of broken promises that I made to Jason, the latest being that I was going to write reviews of the new Dream Theater DVD, the self-titled Dream Theater CD, and the two Five Finger Death Punch CDs and have them to him by the end of the week of December 20th. Here it is, Sunday, December 22, and I have an intro paragraph done for the self-titled Dream Theater CD.

Here's a new word: pathetic.

So, with all of the evidence mounted against me, I accepted the role of "Contributing Writer" whereby I am not held up to the same requirement standards of submitting reviews as often as expected. The writer guidelines are clear and it's also clear I did not meet them.

I wouldn't feel bad about this turn of events if DV was a site that I had just started writing for in recent years, but that is not the case. I began writing for DV when I desperately needed to write music reviews. It was after ICON, a local newspaper in Iowa City, had an editor who, frankly,. He  didn't like my writing. During his tenure, the only CD review that was published was one while he was on a brief sabbatical when he was having knee surgery. That review of Sammy Hagar's "Marching to Mars" was also the first review that DV published: http://dailyvault.com/toc.php5?review=261

Damn, I still like that review.

Anyways, I am hopeful that shifting to CW will be the kick in the ass I need to resume writing music reviews.

Friday, December 20, 2013

Nailed it!

From a Bill O'Reilly column:
Astounding 72 percent of American adults believe big government is the biggest threat to them; 21 percent say big business; five percent big labor. Now that is a repudiation of liberalism -- pure and simple. However, the folks have not yet connected the dots.

They don't like big government. They feel its intruding on their freedoms but they have not linked it up to the Democratic Party and President Obama. Part of the reason for that is the utter incompetence of the Republican Party which still isn't able to present a clear picture of how massive government out-of-control spending and over regulation is harmful to the folks. Unless the Republican Party can find a leader to do that, the country will remain divided."

I am not a mindless Bill O disciple, but his last sentence sums up what I believe. 

Google Has a Sense of Humor


Duck Dynasty

I support Phil Robertson. I don't think the show can exist if he is not on it.

I've watched the series for several years I routinely watch the show on Wednesday nights and record it on the DVR if I'm not home.

I think the show is hilarious and cite these as my favorite moments:
==> the episode where Uncle Si states that "fried shrimp" come from the ocean.
==> the episode where Godwin gets his hot tub set up in his front yard
==> the episode where Jase brings a dead beaver to Willie's kitchen sink.
==> the episode where the lizard gets out of its cage in the warehouse
==> the episode where Willie and Si ride along in the police car and pull over Willie's sister-in-law
==> the episode where Miss Kay invites herself along on her grandkids' bowling excursion
==> every episode ending with the family praying before they eat.

I don't know how the show exists without Phil Robertson.


I wrote all of the above as background for what I think about the explosion of controversy that has rocked our country the last couple of days. First, just to be clear, this is what Phil said, in part:

[Sin]’s not logical, my man. It’s just not logical

When this came out, the GLAAD organization released this statement, but I'll quote one part:

Phil’s lies about an entire community fly in the face of what true Christians believe. 

Who is the GLAAD organization to presume that they know what "true Christians" believe?
 
For my own reference, here is a link to the interview that sparked this controversy: http://www.gq.com/entertainment/television/201401/duck-dynasty-phil-robertson?currentPage=1&printable=true

Thursday, December 19, 2013

Pause? Nah, I Don't Know what the Hell that Means

Thankfully, or perhaps not, this week has flown by. I had an awesome 1:1 with my manager today. It was fun to realize that our meeting naturally was extended from 30 minutes to 60 minutes because we were having a really good conversation. On top of that, when I got out of my meeting, I was assigned to help Alan, a co-worker, get a document ready for distribution. There were 1181 instances of "Normal" style in that Word document when I started working on it and when I handed it off back to Alan today at 3:15, there were none. No bold characters because of pressing Ctrl+B. No italic characters because of pressing Ctrl+I. No underlined characters because of pressing Ctrl+U.

Then, on top of all of that, I finalized another document for a different client and got that off my desk.

I felt productive.

Until I realized that the document I had started to work on first thing was still not done. Then I felt like the hours in the day went pass me too damn quick.

After work, Karen and I went to Best Buy to exchange her Samsung tablet for an iPad. She didn't like the apps that came with the tablet, even though it's the same OS as her Samsung phone. She is now wading through setting it up. Unfortunately for Karen, I know nothing about iPads. I mean, NOTHING. I cannot be her technical support, even though I was roped into being her TS because she needed the incoming and outgoing mail server names. I called our ISP to get that information.

Anyways, the big story around here is that there's a winter storm coming and when it's going to arrive is a guessing game. We are going to Alex's game at Cedar Rapids Xavier tomorrow and it starts at 4:00. That means I'm actually picking up Karen a little before 3:00 so we can make it up to his game. 

Outside of a great week at work, I didn't spend time on the conversion other than Monday night. I am trying to get my 2nd spindle of 100 CDs ripped prior to Monday AM. I know that next week, with Christmas, will be interesting to see if I can get it done.

One final note is that currently, there is no scheduled rehearsal for LCR. I know that life is busy for all of us and I totally get that. I am as busy as Matthew, who is dealing with some issues and as busy as Joe, who is dealing with a search for a new job. I haven't really talked to Brian lately but I would guess that he is busy as well. When we find the time to play together, I think we sound good. I think if we were to get a gig in early 2014, it would be beneficial to us as right now, we do not have a 'next gig' scheduled, unless you count being asked to play the Courage Ride in August 2014. I definitely think we need to gig somewhere prior to that! I am hoping something materializes sooner than later. I miss playing with Joe, Matthew, and Brian. I miss the opportunity to play songs I like. I miss playing:
  1. "Switching to Glide" and 
  2. "Saturday Night" and 
  3. "Gimme 3 Steps" and 
  4. "What I Like About You" and 
  5. "Big River" and 
  6. "Stuck in the Middle" and 
  7. "Rocking in the Free World" and 
  8. "Paranoid" and 
  9. "Rock and Roll All Night" and 
  10. "Lonely Boy"
I think those are the top 10 songs of the ones listed on the LCR Master List page that I want to play at our next rehearsal. I don't think that our next rehearsal will be in 2013, unfortunately. I am hopeful for early January 2014.

It was also announced today that Bayside is touring in the spring of 2014 but, thus far, they are not playing in Iowa. They are playing in Milwaukee, Chicago, and St. Louis, but not stopping in Iowa City or Des Moines. That's too bad although they are playing in Chicago on a Saturday (!!) so I can at least pretend that it is possible that I will go to Chicago to see them play.

Monday, December 16, 2013

15 Day Increments, Not Weekly, Not Daily

I am going to track the reconversion through a separate page, rather than burying it in the flow of posts. Look to the Pages list to the right.

Do What Matters

Just now, I read Do What Matters and I'm sitting in awe. I subscribed to the Must Be This Tall To Ride blog a week or so ago. The author is 34, divorced, and is an advertising copywriter. In other words, we are not in the same place on our life journey. He writes about love as something to cherish because love never fails. I find his writing style to be engaging and witty. The other day, he wrote about his son swearing at school and it was a funny post.

What is important to me? I answer, "My wife. My children. My Catholic faith."

Then I get into materialism.

My CDs / cassettes.
My journals.
My drums.

If I could write posts as interesting as what I've read at the Must Be This Tall To Ride blog on a regular basis, I would be happy.



Sunday, December 15, 2013

Guns - Sleep - CD Conversion Continues

  • If I was drunk the night before and I awoke in a haze, I am fully convinced that this article about gun violence since Newton would sober me up prior to reading the information about February. I could barely stomach reading this article. The tragedy, the sadness, and the horror of what we, as human beings, do to each other is terribly chilling. It would make me frozen in a sauna.
  • Just for the record, no, I did not drink booze last night. I was watching a Hallmark movie and between 9 and 9:30, I fell asleep. When I woke up on the couch, I promptly went to bed. I fell asleep almost immediately. I have been fighting off a cold and I think yesterday's excursion to take the boys to West to catch their bus, followed by driving to Marion, then shopping, then to Coral Ridge Mall, and then home... well, I think it was too much for me and so I tuckered out.
  • I'm starting the second spindle of my CDs. I am somewhat disappointed that it seems there is no mention - anywhere - of one of my favorite punk bands called The Twits. It's like their CD, which I have listened to countless times, does not exist in the world. Searching for "The Twits" is an exercise in frustration. I find this: http://www.bandmine.com/11020682 and a lot of help that is.

Saturday, December 14, 2013

Zoey's for lunch

I was born in Cedar Rapids but today, I have been two places I have never been to before.  1st is Linn-Mar High School and 2nd is Zoey's Pizza. I am sitting here alone because Alexander and Karen went to the popcorn store across the street. I am hoping that the food is goodgood because I suggested coming here . I have also learned WWE is coming to Cedar Rapids on Saturday March 1st!


Phil Collins

I don't give Phil Collins enough respect as a drummer or as a musician. I have always cautiously liked his work with the 80s version of Genesis - "Invisible Touch" was a great album that I wore out on cassette - but I haven't delved into the progressive rock side of Genesis. That all said, this is an amazing song.

Friday, December 13, 2013

Reusing Content

Megan and I did go to see my mother last night. She was in a really good mood.

Meanwhile, one other thing about this week at work. In the user guides I work with in MS Word, I’ve found a really powerful strategy. I can create a cross reference to a numbered step. This has helped me out a lot with steps in procedures that are repeated in multiple procedures. For example:

Procedure 1
1. Go to Path 1 > Path 2.
2. Edit this.
3. Do That.
4. Click Save.

Procedure 2
1. Go to Path 1 > Path 2.
2. Do That.
3. Edit this.
4. Click Save.


I set up cross references to each numbered step in Procedure 2 to each numbered step in Procedure 1, assuming all the text is the same. Then, if I make a change to any text in any of the steps in Procedure 1, that text is updated in Procedure 2.I was working with content that had the exact same navigation path. As I played around with the wording of the navigation, I was able to update all 4 procedures very quickly. 

Coupled with this macro, my life has become much more automated:

Sub RefreshAllFields()
' Macro to update whole document, Fields and TOCs
Dim oStory As Range
Dim oTOC As TableOfContents
Dim oTOF As TableOfFigures
  For Each oStory In ActiveDocument.StoryRanges
    oStory.Fields.Update
    If oStory.StoryType <> wdMainTextStory Then
      While Not (oStory.NextStoryRange Is Nothing)
        Set oStory = oStory.NextStoryRange
        oStory.Fields.Update
      Wend
    End If
  Next oStory
For Each oTOC In ActiveDocument.TablesOfContents
        oTOC.Update
    Next oTOC
For Each oTOF In ActiveDocument.TablesOfFigures
        oTOF.Update
    Next oTOF
    ActiveDocument.Save
End Sub

I've Got Chrsitmas Spirit, Yes I do! How about you?

Thursday, December 12, 2013

Another Career Update

First, just for the record, last night, we did not have Lou's Classic Ride rehearsal. For the record and because I may not always remember what I did, here it is: I watched TV and fell asleep relatively early.

Thinking about it today, I realize it would have been a good night to work on the conversion projects, but I did not. I was tired. The day began by taking the boys (Sam Goldsmith, Seth Goldsmith & my son, Alex) to basketball practice at Iowa City West in the morning. This meant my alarm went off at 4:30 AM. Alex and I left the house at 5:10 AM and by 6:00 AM, I was sitting at my desk. It will be the same schedule tomorrow as well. Alex's team voted to have an early morning practice, mainly so the team will be free to watch the Iowa / ISU men's basketball game tomorrow night. The team's original schedule was for them to get done with practice at 6:30 PM. Because I am an early bird type of person, I volunteered to drive in the morning, even though I think that getting up early will result in not working on the conversion tonight.

Second, the reason for my post. In my cubicle, I have a schedule for a document that needed to be written. These were the project milestones:
  • First Draft Complete: 12/6/13
  • Development Review Complete: 12/10
  • Updates Complete: 12/11
  • Development Approval: 12/12
  • Published: 12/13
I am happy to acknowledge I *did not* keep that schedule. This is the actual schedule:
  • First Draft Complete: 12/6/13
  • Development Review Complete: 12/12
  • Updates Complete: 12/12
  • Development Approval: 12/12
  • Published: 12/12
I was done an entire day EARLY!! I received information about some UI changes on Tuesday, 12/10, and then, yesterday, I was in a 1 hour meeting where the document was reviewed. After the meeting, I made the updates. This morning, I sent the document out! I am happy to have completed this work.

Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Career Update

I chuckle when I think about how life has so dramatically changed both in my attitude about my life and about my attitude about my career. It is well documented on this blog that I love my current job. I really do. I get rather animated when I think about Confluence and reusing content. I can include a snippet in multiple pages and, when I update the snippet, the multiple pages are automatically updated. It is so powerful! I want to use that strategy in my Word docs as well to avoid making multiple updates to text that has traditionally been copied and pasted multiple times. We have a section in our user guides that duplicates content and, per a client, it is necessary to have that section. Therefore, I am using bookmarks and cross references within Word to automatically regenerate that section. It is somewhat time intensive to set up, but it is going to be really sweet when it is fully operational.

And it's not just using snippets and cross references in the docs I work on that makes my job awesome. Before I write about 2013, if you knew me in 1992, you knew me as a different person. I was an English major and I had a college professor. He did not like that I didn't actively participate in class discussion. To this day, I don't know why I was intimidated by speaking in class, but in his letter of recommendation for me that I had asked him to write for me, he wrote about how my verbal skills had been slower to develop. I have never forgotten his opinion of my verbal skills and it has repeatedly challenged me to be a more vocal person when it comes to my personality in the workplace. It turns out it was the kick in the ass I needed.

I thought about him when I was on the phone recently with a co-worker going over proposed changes to a user guide that a client wanted to have us make. When I explained my reasoning, I had a flashback to spring 1992 when I had to defend my term paper through oral arguments. I did so much better in 2013 and my oral defense of my reasoning for the way in which the user guide is structured and written compared to that term paper. The best part of that phone call? My opinion was respected and the majority of changes I rejected because they didn't match our department's style guide were accepted by the client. I had a good day.

Another thing that happened was I got an email from a co-worker. I've been working on completing a column in an Excel file. I am 12% complete. My co-worker emailed me to ask about my status and I had to explain that I had been working on other projects with more pressing deadlines. I wanted to write back to her that I had made more progress than 12%, but I couldn't. I thought about this Dilbert when I was writing my response.
http://dilbert.com/strip/1998-10-07

Sunday, December 8, 2013

Trapped Under Ice

Confirmation

We just got back from the Mass at Saint Thomas More where the candidates for Confirmation were introduced to the assembly. I'm not usually concerned with what people wear to Mass. During the summer, I routinely wear shorts and a shirt with a collar.

But Confirmation, in the Catholic church, is a BIG deal. It's one of the Sacraments. It's where the candidate says, "I believe in God" on their own. At the Sacrament of Baptism, the candidate's godparents made that statement for them and then, at Confirmation, it's up to the candidate to say, "Yes, I believe in God." It's a big deal.

But why doesn't our parish, Saint Thomas More, get that? Why are Confirmation candidates looking like they just got down with basketball practice and wearing a sweat suit? Why are the parents of these candidates saying, "No. Absolutely not. You are NOT wearing that to 11 AM Mass when you are being introduced as a Confirmation candidate."

To me, it doesn't make a lot of sense.

Saturday, December 7, 2013

21

Pulling into the Riverside Casino!

Friday, December 6, 2013

The Season Begins. ..

I am here at Iowa City West High School to watch Alex play in the second game of his high school basketball team career. They won the first game of the season last night. Coach put him in the game with a 18 point lead and 1:34 left in the game. Then there was a 7 minute scrimmage and Alex played the entire game. He was fouled in the act of shooting and then missed the two free throws, so I am going to hope that he has a great game tonight.

War on Christmas

I am not a fan of this guy. O'Reilly says the ACLU is waging a war on Christmas. This guy gets this majestic quote from an ACLU spokesperson who says, "What? Us? We aren't waging a war."

If the ACLU sees what they are doing as "right" why would they think it is a war? They think it is their mandate.

Personally, I say "Merry Christmas."

Tuesday, December 3, 2013

27 Ways to Get More Sh!t Done

Great article about getting stuff done, which I really like.

But it's missing an entry.

28. Instead of writing blog posts for http://prhmusic.blogspot.com, simply keep track of great ideas for writing about later.

Sir Ozzness' Birthday

Ozzy Osbourne celebrates a birthday today. Here is my favorite song that he sings.

And the Winner is... Alev's "We Live in Paradise"!

I began the process of reconverting on Sunday, December 1, 2013, @ 8:15 AM and the first CD I converted was Alev's "We Live in Paradise."

I will have a project for the next couple of years. I see 3 major groups os CDs to convert:
  1. 2600 CDs on 26 spindles
    • That is not 2600 'albums' as I have several data CDs with multiple releases.
  2. 1000 CDs that are on one of my 2 wooden racks.
  3. 480 CDs from Mitch
    • Using the Craigslist site for Indianapolis, I connected with Mitch, who was selling CDs. When I returned from Indianapolis and the National Catholic Youth Conference (NCYC) from 11/21 - 11/24, I brought with me 4 zipper cases of CDs. His ad said "500 CDs for $225" but my official count is 480.
      • Some are bands I listen to on a regular basis:
        • Alice in Chains
        • Stone Temple Pilots
      • Some are bands I do not listen to on a regular basis:
        • Smashing Pumpkins
        • The Cure
        • Ben Folds Five
I look forward to working on the conversion. I did not do so last night, but I plan to do so each night the rest of this week.

Grim Reaper

Ah, Grim Reaper.

I don't know why this band never got the accolades that other metal bands from this same era received. I know they were criticized by Beavis and Butthead - I vaguely remember their description of the singer as looking like a pig - but I didn't really understand why. It's kind of like a radio station never playing Poison but playing an Aerosmith tune that came out at the same time.

This song is on their second release "Rock You to Hell" and I have always liked the lyrics.

Sunday, December 1, 2013

found

I am sitting here at Mass.  No, it's not started yet, but this is my first post I am writing on my phone instead of a PC.  This is not something I plan to do a lot of but it is nice to have the phone pick the next word for me.  The youth group sounds like they are missing some percussion, but as of now, I sit here and I am not sure if I will play drums.  Thanks to my big mouth. I am content to sit with Karen and Alex.

To Begin Again

After a short break, I'm sitting in the den with a CD ripping. For the sake of documentation, I re-converted my first CD at 8:15 AM on 12/1/2013 and it was Alev's "We Live in Paradise." I am going to add a tag "Conversion Projects - Redo" in addition to the existing "Conversion Projects" tag so I can separate the two conversion efforts.

I am also going to keep track of my file count for the redo and what percentage I have redone compared to where I was when the 1 TB hard drive failed, which was 64603 File(s) 541,778,588,259 bytes. For the sake of clarity, I'm going to say my previous conversion was at 64600 (minus 3 files) just so it is an even number. I'm pretty sure I had at least 3 duplicate files when it died.

In the meantime, I'm working on a list of all the directories I had so I can create a separate page on this blog and track when I reconverted the CD. I have an issue that I had a lot of folders / albums that were not physical CDs - they were downloaded from youtube.com, they were downloaded from publicists, they were borrowed from friends / family / neighbors and ripped, and I'm sure a lot of other ways that I can't think of right now. Thus, when I am 100% complete with the process of ripping every CD I own, the numbers between what I had and what I have will probably be somewhat close (because of the 480 CDs from Mitch in Indy), but it will not have my entire collection. It's not a 1:1 anymore.

I hope that this all makes sense when I am rereading it in the future. I will say that if my 1 TB hard drive ever comes back from the dead and I can retrieve my files, I can't honestly say that any hours I put into reconverting will be wasted hours.

It's 9:31 and I told Megan I would go with her to 11 AM Mass at 10 so that she could sing. Karen's in the shower but I need to slip in and be done prior to 10 AM. I don't know if I will play drums at Mass - it'd be okay to do so, but I need to be ready.

Wednesday, November 27, 2013

Inventory of the Conversion

Yesterday, I talked to my co-worker Jay about the continuing saga of being unable to retrieve my files. He used a phrase that I give him full credit for: "passion of the librarian". That's what really describes me. I want a massive collection and it's not just with CDs. I have a large collection of books. I have a large collection of cassettes. I have a large collection of journals and a large collection of songs I wrote, which I had painstakingly transcribed years ago that are now lost as they were on the 1 TB hard drive.  Crap.

Anyways, last night I took an inventory of what I have in front of me while watching "The Lincoln Lawyer" in the living room. I spent some time further analyzing the purchase I made in Indianapolis from Mitch. As the picture from Monday showed, there are 4 cases. I have now identified the 4 cases as A, B, C, and D, with a little white sticker and I have now counted the number of CDs in each case:
  • A has 82
  • B has 92
  • C has 195
  • D has 111
So, when added up, there are 480 CDs. I also noticed that I already have some of them, but a lot of them are new to my collection. Bands like The Smashing Pumpkins, The Cure, and Ben Folds Five are new to my collection so I look forward to listening to those bands.

I also spent some time with my existing spindles. I have 26 spindles that hold 100 CDs each.

I have approximately 760 CDs in my CD racks, but that number may be way off because as part of the conversion, I put some CDs on spindles after converting and I put some CDs back in their original case. I don't have a clear sense of the balance. I was originally just going to keep all CDs in their original case so I could find them quickly, but then I changed that and started making piles of empty CD cases because the CD was being placed on a spindle. I didn't do a good job of being organized during the previous conversion.

I have approximately 200 CDs that I had been working on that will require me to manually enter artist, album, and other identifying information, because most are unknown bands and their information is not available in the database that Windows Media Player uses.

  480
2600
  760
  160
4000

So I'm going to start out with a guess of 4000 CDs to convert which may be totally on the mark or totally off the mark.

Notice that is the number of physical CDs, not the number of albums. The actual number of albums I have is going to be several thousand more than that because many CDs - at least 50? - are what I would call a 'data CD' that each have anywhere from 10 to 12 albums, but I don't have an accurate count.

I will say I feel somewhat lucky to have a list of my collection because of running the DOS batch file. The last time it ran successfully for the 1 TB drive that I was able to pull over to the 2 TB drive was on Thursday, 11/14/13. When I search for Directory of e:\music\ as a string of text, I find 6473 and to dig a bit deeper, of those 6473 matches, there are 154 matches for Directory of e:\music\Metallica.

I must admit that I considered quite seriously whether I wanted to create a separate blog simply for the conversion of this collection to MP3, but I decided against it because I figured that when I finished the conversion by, say, 1/1/2016, I would probably want to merge it back into this blog and it would turn into a mess. Instead, I will continue to tag the updates to the conversion so I can quickly locate all related posts. I am also going to not post daily updates of what my DOS batch file results are simply because I felt bored reading them and if I'm bored, I can't imagine what anyone else would think. I am more likely to do weekly posts and to create a separate tag, like "Conversion Project - Weekly Status" so I can take those numbers and pull them into a graph.

As I just mentioned, I am optimistically hoping to be done with this second go-round of the conversion by 1/1/2016 and I'm now trying to decide if I want to do additional prep work in the month of December and actually wait until 1/1/2014 before starting the re-conversion. I guess I'm still holding out a bit of hope that I will find a way to get the e:\music folder off of the 1 TB hard drive, even though I'm not really optimistic. I did read that the freezer trick I tried has worked for people not on the first or second attempt, but on the 3rd attempt. It may be worth it to exhaust all reasonable measures before restarting.

Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Six Years Ago

Six years ago, I started this blog.

Lee Knutson died on this date in 1996. He was 27. We used to ride in the morning to swimming practice during each of the four years we were out for swimming. He'd get in my car and he'd say to me, "Damn Hans! It's colder than a witch's tit! Didn't you warm this beast up for me?" I wonder what he'd be like now.

Monday, November 25, 2013

He Made It!!

He did it. Alex made the Iowa City West freshman basketball team and I couldn't be prouder. I am so happy that he was able to show the coach that he was good enough to play. Alex has talked about playing basketball for Iowa City West since he was very young. As I mentioned, he has practice tomorrow AM at 6 AM, but has to be there @ 5:40 AM.

I am going to bed.

Work Update

It feels like my life is going well on so many levels, including work. I love my job, I have a great manager, and I have plenty to work on. I believe the rest of 2013 and pretty much all of 2014 will be crazy busy, but the kind of busy that energizes me. There are a lot of projects to complete, including a radical change in the way the work I do is completed. I can't wait to get started.

Proud Addition

In the same breath that my 1 TB external hard drive doesn't seem to be accessible, I can now report that I have added 500ish CDs to my collection. In Indianapolis, IN, I met up with Mitch, who sold me his CD collection for just over $200. I now have a lot of great new CDs to listen to and, eventually, convert to MP3. Hip hip hooray! I have Alice in Chains, Pearl Jam, a lot of Smashing Pumpkins, and even a box set of rarities from the Cure. This is what I bought:

A Classic

Battle Born

What I really like about Five Finger Death Punch is that they write great lyrics to go along with their hostility at the world.

Continuation

A long time ago, I plotted out how to reach 1400 posts by tomorrow. Unfortunately, the plot requires 4 more posts and I can't, in clear conscience, go to bed with only 4 total posts, including this one, required to hit 1400 posts.

Thus, I give you EMPHATIC's "Remember Me" which is the first single off their sophomore album Another Life. What I like the most about it is the simplicity of the lyrics and the relatively simple music. I hope to see this band in concert when / if they come around the area.


That Didn't Work

Well, it's 8:55 PM and I am not going to write anymore interesting posts tonight. I am tired, my 1 TB external drive hasn't been saved after being in a deep freeze over the weekend, and my back and bones are tired. Plus, I just found out that Alex has basketball practice tomorrow AM @ 6 AM, which means he has to be at practice at 5:40 AM which means that I am leaving with Alex @ 5:10, which means I am getting up at 4:30 AM. All of that means, I am tired and I am quitting. I don't know how to get my hard drive to work and it really torques me off. I am not in the best of moods.

Back in the Saddle

There are so many things I want to capture from the awesome weekend in Indianapolis at NCYC. I can't decide if I want to compose a single post or if I want to break out each memory that I want to capture into snippets of the time I spent. I'm butting up against a self-imposed schedule to reach 1400 posts by tomorrow, which is the 6th anniversary of this blog. Yeah, crazy. I have this post, a scheduled post, plus 4 more to write before tomorrow. I am not sure I will be able to watch WWE *and* write that much. I think it's important, though, to thoroughly capture what I am thinking about my life, about my faith, and about how I want to live my life in the time I have on earth. I'm not being overly morbid, but it was really driven home by more than one speaker, each day on this earth is precious and if you think / say, "I'll live the way God wants me to live starting tomorrow because I'm not going to die today," I am rolling the dice that I will be here tomorrow, but Scripture says, "Be watchful because you don't know the day or hour."

Overall, I had a tremendously amazing time. I made a connection with a lot of people, including some I predict I will never see again, but that connection, that 'touch' will not be forgotten. For example, I talked to kids from Albany, New York. I said to her, "I think there's a famous band from Albany, but I can't remember who." It turns out that Count the Stars is from Albany. Anyone that has read this space for any length of time knows that CTS is MY FAVORITE BAND OF ALL TIME and here I was, unable to recall that tidbit of information. I was unable to find that girl again.

I haven't decided how to capture the many thoughts in my head so stay tuned.




Wednesday, November 20, 2013

Bah

The thing I like most about my life is how a plan usually comes together in an unexpected way. Consider that I thought, for sure, I would have zero time tonight to write. Yet, here I am, at the kitchen table with about 10 minutes to spare. The dishwasher is swirling away tonight's supper, the dryer is assigned to a child for later, and, in the meantime, Alex and Megan are upstairs slaving away on homework. Karen? She's getting her nails done because, you know, there are things in life called "priorities." Case in point is that my priority is to make sure my 2 GB MP3 player has enough Bayside, Count the Stars, Mothermania, Metallica, Adelitas Way, and other miscellaneous goodies in my ears during a long bus ride.

The other major thing going on is that I didn't make any progress on the resurrection of the 1 TB external hard drive except to spend 1.5 hours with my neighbor John last night - we were unsuccessful. As a last ditch effort, I have placed the drive in a Ziploc bag and put it in the freezer. I have read / heard that freezing the hard drive may help it. I will try it out Sunday or Monday, depending upon how tired I am from the weekend.

Time to rock. No, not LCR. I'm taking Alex to basketball practice / tryout.

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

Move Along, there's no Food here...

If I was given this salad on my death bed, I would die hungry.

Consistency In The Leader?

The more I work with Office 2013, the more I fear I am going to continue to find things that are simply wrong. I use Word 2013 and I use Excel 2013 the most. I'm not a big fan of the new "Open" interface that was introduced. By accident, I learned that I can avoid it by doing the following in MS Word but doing the same steps in Excel don't give me the same results. Why? WHY didn't a technical writer at MS say, "Hey, uh, you're not consistent" or, if the technical writer did say that, why wasn't it fixed?

Word

  1. Click the Open icon.

 

Excel

  1. Click the Open icon.

Definition of Irony

Not being able to access a 1 TB external hard drive & taking a course at work about security and then reading this on one of the slides:
  • Remember to always back up your data. Backing up your data is important so you can restore corrupted or lost files. Consider saving your important files to a network drive that is backed up frequently, if your local hard drive on your computer has no automatic backup functionality in place. Save a new document as soon as you begin it and set your application to save automatically every 5 to 10 minutes. Periodically test your backups. Remember, back up, back up, and back up!

I do not *have* a backup of my 60,000 MP3s...

Matthew suggested the old freezer trick, which he defined as "Put[ting] the hard drive in a plastic freezer bag (to protect it from moisture) and then in the freezer. When it is really cold, sometimes you can plug them in and they will work for an hour or two, often long enough to get data off. There are no promises, but if all else has failed, I've seen it work."

I've also found a freeware that is supposed to help me.


No Luck Yet

I wasn't able to spend a lot of time on the 1 TB external hard drive. I plan to see if I can use a boot CD I have to at least access the files outside of Windows and to then copy the files to the 2 TB external hard drive. As soon as Alex came home from basketball tryouts, I was off to bed since I was up early to have him to West by 5:45 AM.

Update! Just talked to my co-worker Jay and he is going to bring a different USB cable to see if that solves the problem. Hope!

Sunday, November 17, 2013

Sporadic Dies

It had been kind of sporadic inactivity with the 1 TB external hard drive. All of a sudden, it would stop responding and the only way to fix it would be to unplug the power supply and replug it back in, but then, unfortunately, it would only be a matter of minutes before it would stop responding.

Thus, I fear it is on its last leg. I have it hooked up to the Windows XP box and it is doing a chkdsk e: /r command in the hope that I will be able to recover the information. Unfortunately, I don't have the e:\music - yepper, the one directory with all my music - offloaded from it yet so whether all the work I've done since MM/DD/CCYY on the conversion from CDs to MP3, from cassettes to MP3, from vinyl to MP3... I'm staring at the sad face of losing all of those hours.

On one hand, fine. It's not like I don't have the CDs and cassettes to start over. I would maybe do some things differently, such as do a better job of organizing my 'done' pile and 'not done' pile.

On the other hand, though, I am nearly sick to my stomach when I think about the hours upon hours upon HOURS I've spent on the conversions.

I've not given up hope that running chkdsk will, somehow, allow me to recover the e:\music folder at least long enough to move the files to my Toshiba 2 TB external hard drive. Perhaps I was too rough on the external hard drive that seems to be in doubt.

Dream Theater

Who Knew? I Mean Seriously?!?

Who the hell is Zac Brown and when did he grow a pair and start covering Metallica?!?


And Rage Against the Machine?!?

Friday, November 15, 2013

Al Sharpton Blasts Sarah Palin for Making Debt-Slavery Comparison

I am not an Al Sharpton type of guy in the first place, but when he comes out and talks about Sarah Palin being a racist for Making Debt-Slavery Comparison, I just shake my head.

Here's a news flash.

People need to put on their big boy pants. 

Why do we live in a culture where it is racist to ask people to not use certain words. Read the article above. There are other meanings of the word "slave" - it can mean other things than the awful slavery in the United States.

High School Student Gives Devastating Speech Against Common Core Education

I watched this speech about Common Core Education and really liked what he said. I hope this young man uses his talents.

Gasp! In all the excitement, I ....

forgot to embed the new Bayside track!

Drummer as a Tractor

Easy Win

They make it look easy when the score is 109 - 63,

Thursday, November 14, 2013

LCR Status

We rehearsed last night at the studio and while we were rough from not playing together for over a month, we were able to bang through a couple of oldies as well as some new songs (not in order):
  1. Foghat
  2. Hoochie-Coochie Man
  3. Ramble On
  4. Dance the Night Away
  5. Mississippi Queen
  6. Hot Rod Lincoln
  7. Godzilla
  8. Sweet Jane
We rehearsed for nearly two hours. I need to work on Ramble On, Godzilla, and Hot Rod Lincoln. In my opinion, Dance the Night Away isn't going to work. I tried to sing guide vocals and the others said I needed a mic to sing it. Uh, no. I have no singing talent. I will not sing.

Eight Years Have Passed

Grandparents were not really a big part of my life. On my father's side, my Grandpa Hanson was in a nursing home and passed away in the early 1980s. I vaguely remember at least one visit to a nursing home. I know I was at his funeral, but it's funny that what I remember the most about his death is that my mom took Mark and I to Younker's to buy us each a suit for his funeral. I never knew my Grandma Hanson.

So, the only grandparent I had in my life was my mother's mom, Louise Simons. Her husband, Leo, passed away in 1976, when I was in kindergarten. I remember hearing stories about how I would sit on his lap and he'd tell a story about the "moo moo cow" going away and I'd cry, but then the "moo moo cow" would come back and I'd laugh. Whatever that means. So after Leo passed away, Grandma went on to live by herself for another 30 years. For most of those years, she lived by herself. If she were alive today, it would be her 105th birthday today. Sadly, she passed away on April 26, 2006. My brother Mark shares her birthday - he is 41 - but I'm thinking more about Grandma today. I shared the following words, slightly edited, at her wake:

I'd like to share with you a couple of reflections on how her life influenced my life and what knowing her means to me. It's an understatement that she was a very positive influence in my life. I was always close to her. I always viewed her as a strong person. I remember that when I was younger, she would babysit me on Saturday nights. We'd go to 4 PM Mass at All Saints, then go to her house for dinner. We'd have mac and cheese with hot dogs. For dessert, we'd have lime sherbet and Hershey's chocolate syrup.

I always saw Grandma's faith as a model for my own walk with Christ. I can't count the number of hours we spent in church together in addition to the Saturday nights she'd watch me. We always went to Christmas Eve Mass and she kept her bible on the kitchen table. Her faith was a model for me and I will never forget that.

After Grandma went to Hallmar, she was still always trying to care for me. I would visit during lunch hour and when I arrived, she'd be in the cafeteria eating. She would always ask if I wanted any of her meal and I would usually fib and say, 'no, I'm not hungry.' Sometimes she'd try and take something from someone else's tray to give to me. On other visits, we'd sit in her room. While we looked out her window, I would hold her shaking hand.

She was always feisty. One time when I was leaving, I told her she needed to stay out of trouble. She looked me square in the eyes and said, "You ask for the impossible." When the nurses would give her pill, she'd put it in her mouth and fake that she had swallowed it, then she'd turn to me and show me that she still had the pill on her tongue.

When Grandma broke her hip, Karen and I stayed with her a night in the hospital. She drifted in and out of consciousness. In the middle of the night, she bellowed:

Be at my side,
To light and guard,
To rule and guide.

At the top of her lungs.

There was always a twinkle in her eye, even when she was not doing so hot. The very next night, when I went to visit her, a nurse came in. She said to Grandma, "Louise, I'm going to put an IV in you and this is going to poke a little." When the needle touched her skin, Grandma jerked her arm away from the nurse and said, "Hey! Don't do that!" The first nurse called a second nurse. The first nurse held the needle, the second nurse held Grandma's left hand and I held her right. The first nurse said again, "Louise, this is going to poke a bit." This time, when the needle touched the skin, Grandma couldn't move her left arm and she couldn't move her right arm so she tried to spit at the nurses.

One special part of my life that Grandma and I shared was music. She bought me my first cassette tape in 1980. Nearly 4000 CDs and tapes later, I think it is fitting that I heard this song I'm about to play for you just today. It's a song that describes someone longing for the waiting to be over, to join Christ in heaven. The lyrics that stick out when I hear this song are as follows. I think of the conversation Grandma was having with Christ during the last days of her glorious life.

Then I played a song by Chris Rice entitled "Smile."


To say I miss Grandma is an understatement. I have converted some College Tapes to MP3 and so I can hear her voice, literally. It makes me really happy to hear her voice. Another way that she is always present in my day to day life is within the name of the band I play drums in. The name of the band is Lou's Classic Ride. There are three people named Lou that influenced that name.
  1. My father-in-law's name is Lou and he always talks about the classic cars he used to own.
  2. Joe's ex-father-in-law served blacks at his diner when that wasn't being done.
  3. Lou is short for Louise. Grandma made drum cases out of denim for me and I still have them. She also helped clean my cymbals at least once in my parent's basement tub sink. I remember she went to mass at St. Pius when I used to play with their music group during my senior year of high school into my freshman year of college. And, as I mentioned above, she bought my first cassette (the Xanadu soundtrack). The story behind that is that my mom said I could get a record, which was a few bucks, but I ended up with the Xanadu soundtrack instead. I think I was supposed to pay Grandma back the difference, but I also don't think she ever accepted the money. Back when this was happening in 1980, cassettes were between $10 - $12 and a 45 RPM record was between $4 -$6.

Tuesday, November 12, 2013

Collection (not Mine, but Wishing!)






Martha

A wonderful woman that I knew all of my life passed away. Martha, or Marty as everyone called her, died yesterday. She leaves behind her husband George and two daughters, Mary Beth and Julie. When my parents went to the hospital for the birth of my brother Mark, Mom and Dad first took me over to Marty and George's house. Marty and George were the hosts from the Hanson side of the family at our wedding reception. I remember their house on Edgewood Road had a huge weeping willow tree in the backyard. I remember many times going to their house after Mass on a Sunday morning. I remember their basement was really cool with a piano - it may have been a player piano. I also remember they had an old phone with the crank on the side mounted on the wall.

I knew Marty was in poor health and it had been many years since I saw her.

Archie Bunker Predicted the Future

Monday, November 11, 2013

Complete

My Ludwig drums are see-through shells. I totally love the way the clear snare drum Karen bought for me for my birthday sounds and I'm really grateful that I have a matching clear snare. I think it looks really cool. That said, I get email alerts when there is a match for "Ludwig Vistalite" and the one I just received shows the drum below. What I like about this drum is that it is a 6 1/2" x 14" snare, which is identical to the snare that came with my set, except this one is see-through. It is also listed as $509. No, I don't have an extra $509 laying around and, of course, they only have one left. I'm not going to be a drum collector, ever, but if I were, I would add this to my collection!

22 More

After I ran my DOS batch file last night, I added 22 to e:\music to take me to 64604 File(s) 541,784,607,331 bytes. I don't know, yet, what the week has in store for me as far as progress. In case it hasn't been mentioned lately, Monday nights are usually not all that great because I watch WWE Raw and, if I'm not downstairs in the main area, I'm watching it on our bed and, traditionally, I will fall asleep. Maybe tonight I go downstairs.

I'll take a picture tonight and add to this post so that it makes sense, but I have a long row of the CDs I think I have left. It's kind of exciting to think that I'm almost done. I'll also take a picture of my spindles so I have it documented how many CDs I actually have. Actually, I may just put all of my CDs together and take some pics because the last pictures of my collection I have on this blog are at least a couple of years old.

Sounds like a good child story to work on tonight.

Sunday, November 10, 2013

Conversion Status - 11/10/13

After some sporadic activity over the weekend, I am now at 64582 File(s) 541,704,300,501 bytes. I am doing some auditing of some spindles, though not a full-blown audit yet, so I'm not making a tremendous amount of progress towards hitting 65,000 by the end of 2013. It's likely I will hit that number prior to 2013 and, if that happens, I will certainly adjust my expectations.

Number 1

Who else? Black Sabbath!

Number 2

Number 3

Number 4

Number 5 / Dee Snider Defends Heavy Metal Against the PMRC







Number 6

Number 7

Number 8

National Metal Day Eve

It was tomorrow two years ago (11/11/11) when this article put a chink in the armor of the grand day. I don't plan to let that get to me. The following are eight great metal songs I've added to my playlist for tomorrow.

Friday, November 8, 2013

Mouse Dart Shutdown Windows

Anyone remember an .exe file that when double-clicked, would give you the ability to shoot darts at a mouse on the screen. If you hit the mouse, the mouse would walk off screen and return, dragging a dialog box. The dialog box said "Windows will now restart" and the mouse would use the dart you hit him with to press the Ok button. Then the screen would go to a c:\ prompt. Googling "mouse dart shut down windows" and only found this instead of what I was looking for. I have no idea what the name of the file is that I am looking for which makes locating it that much more difficult.

Update:
While I didn't find the file to download, I did find a description of the file on a blog. The blog title includes the word "daily" but I think we have different definitions of the word "daily" when it hasn't been updated since September 2008:

Thursday, November 7, 2013

Putting Events into Perspective

I came across this essay from an old WinHelp file and thought it was reasonably well-written. This was back when we had a pop-up camper so I'm going to guess it was around 2001 when the events below happened.

When my wife Karen called me at work Tuesday to tell me that she had been rear-ended at a stoplight and that the hitch on our van had been bent because of the accident, the first words out of my mouth were, "Damnit! That means we won't be able to get the camper home tonight!" She replied with something to the effect of, "I'm really not worried about that right now. I'm okay and the kids are okay." Only after I hung up with Karen did I realize the value of priorities in life and how easily one can get caught up in the little things that don't mean a lot in the big picture of life.

This pop up camper of ours, for example, has lately become a tightening noose around my neck and only was getting tighter as the week continued. Last Friday night, I went over to pick up our camper with my son Alexander. We had left it there while the good folks at North Liberty Tire replaced the two leaking tires. It had rained that day and I had my brand new tennis shoes on. All I could concern myself with was not stepping in the mud as I tenderly hooked my camper to the van's hitch. As soon as the chains were hooked, I jumped to the concrete and took off my shoes, clapping them together to get the mud off of them. Then I took Kleenex and put them on the passenger side of our van and placed my muddy shoes on that so the carpet wouldn't get muddy.

I shifted to Drive and pulled forward. I heard this awful ear-splitting scrape of metal and jammed the van back into Park. I hopped out of the van and saw the damage. In my haste to get the camper home, I had forgotten to crank up the front support of the camper. The long cylinder support pipe was now bent and as I tried to crank up the pipe, obscenities began rolling off my tongue. The pipe would not retreat into its sheath.

Marck at North Liberty Tire said, "No problem." He took a large sledgehammer and began whacking the pipe towards the van to straighten it out. After one such whack, we noticed a crack in the pipe. Even if the pipe had straightened, it wouldn't have supported the weight of the camper.

"No problem," Marck repeated. "There's a tractor supply store in Cedar Rapids. They'll have a replacement. Grab one and we'll put it on for you. No big deal." I returned home to explain to Karen what had happened and made the plan to go to the store Saturday morning to get a replacement part.
I loaded the kids up Saturday morning and off we went to Cedar Rapids. The man at the store took me right to the part I needed. Feeling relieved, I bought the kids some candy orange slices to celebrate how easy this issue had been resolved. I cranked the radio and the local station was playing Heart's "Barracuda" a song I've always liked. And even better, the replacement part was $17.99, cheaper than the $50 ballpark figure that had automagically popped into my head.

Monday night, on the way home with the part, I stopped at North Liberty Tire. I took the new part out and positioned it at the hole I needed to insert it into. The new part's diameter was too large. "No problem," Trevor told me. "Get the right size part and bring it back."

Tuesday, during my lunch hour, I went to the store and exchanged my bad part for a good part. I triumphantly returned to North Liberty Tire after work and found I hadn't solved my problem. This second part was too big in diameter as well. This time, though, Trevor gave me some good advice when he said, "Maybe you'll have to go to a store that specializes in camper supplies."

Ever have a blonde moment?

Wednesday morning, I returned to the store with the 2nd bad part I had purchased and got my money back. At work, I called Jeff's RV in Marion. I described my problem and he said, "I should have the part you need." I drove out during my lunch hour and sure enough, Jeff had the part I needed. $34.45 was my final bill.

Wednesday night, I returned to North Liberty Tire to drop off the part for Trevor. He happened to not be there, but would call when it was done. Not more than a 1/2 hour later, the phone rang. Karen answered it. The camper was done.

Only now, the car being in an accident came into play. The hitch on the van was damaged so there was no way to hook the van to the camper. Luckily, my neighbor Dave was home. He drove me over to pick it up. To make things even better, he backed up the camper into its resting place until Spring 2001.

This whole ordeal  has taught me that material possessions are not worth fretting about. As it turned out, I was worried about a material thing when I should have been worried about my wife and kids, who were at the van when it was rear-ended.

TNA Wrestling Job Opening – Seeking Writer/Producer

I would give anything to have a life where I could write for a professional wrestling organization like TNA. This job looks so awesome to me. Except I don't qualify. Well, I do, but I don't. I don't have any experience writing for television.

Desired Skills and Qualifications

  • A creative, original thinker with great programming instincts.
  • Minimum of 3 years writing and production experience in television preferred.
  • Deep understanding of pop culture, trends, and topical events, especially as they relate to television programming.
  • Writing and directing reality television a plus.
  • An experimental, risk-taking mindset. Must be open to thinking outside of traditional television formats and outside of the traditional linear television model.
  • Highly developed written and verbal communications skills. Ability to communicate story lines, including vision and strategy, effectively with senior management, writing and production teams, and external parties.
  • Awareness of, and potential passion for, TNA content.
How awesome!

Wednesday, November 6, 2013

Slipping

This week has been slipping away from me. Not only does the CD to MP3 conversion get no love Monday or Tuesday night, it is unlikely it will get love tonight. Today, the count is 64356 File(s) 534,568,250,156 bytes and I am pretty sure it will be that again tomorrow morning. What has happened this week?
  • Monday
    • Megan had a doctor appointment at 4:30. After the appointment, we went to KFC for supper, then dropped both kids off at West High for a West High v. Bettendorf playoff game. Karen and I went home and shortly before WWE Raw went off the air, I fell asleep.
  • Tuesday
    • Karen and I had a meeting about NCYC at STM at 4:15. The meeting lasted until 6:30 PM and by that time, I was famished. Karen and I went to Wendy's. After eating, we went to Fareway and got pop to take over to Dave & Cindy Downes' house. Why? See Wednesday.
  • Wednesday
    • Art, Cindy Downes' father, passed away and the wake is today. We brought over the pop because that's become our 'thing' to help out during the wake / funeral cycle.
    • Originally, I had penciled in a Lou's Classic Ride rehearsal with Joe / Brian (Matthew is out of town until Saturday). Yes, we are still a band. It's kind of funny how life has taken over our desire to rehearse. 
      • We have added a few songs to the list of ones we want to do: 
        • Van Halen's "Dance the Night Away" 
        • Rolling Stones' "It's Only Rock and Roll"
        • Led Zeppelin's "Ramble On"
  • Thursday
    • I have a doctor's appointment at 5.
    • Alex has an open gym at West from 6:30 - 8.
  • Friday
    • Not 100% sure. The Iowa men's basketball team plays at Carver-Hawkeye Arena at 8:30, but I'm not itching to go.
    • Megan works 6-10.
  • Saturday
    • We have yet another NCYC meeting at STM at 9 AM.
    • Household chores
      • Clean up the garage
      • Assemble the crib for Christmas (weather permitting)
    • Megan works 12-4.
    • 5:15 Mass
  • Sunday
    • Alex has a confirmation meeting from 4:00 - 5:30 (I think).
Next week looks just as busy. I love it, though. I love the fact that life is busy.

I especially love the fact that each day I come to work, I love my job. I just had a short conversation with my manager about some suggested changes and it went really well. Life is good.

Tuesday, November 5, 2013

I first saw this video on this page and I marveled at the defense of President Obama's promise about being able to keep your health care plan if you like it.

Monday, November 4, 2013

On the Way to 65,000 MP3s

I made significant progress on the conversion last night as my total rose to 64356 File(s) 534,568,250,156 bytes. The schedule for this week is still being shook out, but I'm hoping for at least some time tonight and tomorrow night to continue. I am thinking I will have 75,000 MP3s when all of my CDs are converted.

So while the CD aspect of the conversion is progressing, the cassette aspect is dead in the water. I was somewhat disheartened when I noticed how far behind I am on that aspect. I have marked the boxes of cassettes I have with a two month window. I am several months behind, partly due to a sharper focus on the CD to MP3 conversion aspect. My new plan is to focus on CDs from now until 12/31/2013 in the hope that I can actually get through them all. If that happens, the start of 2014 will be the start of a renewed effort on converting cassettes. I have nearly 1000 to go through so I know it is an aspect of the conversion that will take at least a couple of years, if not more.

My hard deadline for the entire conversion project (CDs, cassettes, videos, LPs) is 12/31/2021 but my hope is that I am not working on this in 2021. I have no idea how many hours the cassettes are going to require. I don't even have a firm idea if 2021 is realistic.