Jeber’s

the rest of the web

Archive for December, 2004

30 December
Comments

San Diego gets weather

COX.net for San Diego – Local: “(San Diego, CA) — For the second-consecutive day, heavy rains and gusty winds caused blackouts throughout San Diego County. SDG&E officials say most of the outages occurred between 1 a.m. and 5 a.m., leaving a total of about 82 thousand homes and businesses without electricity. Hardest hit were Logan Heights, City Heights, Encanto and the College areas. The public is being urged to stay away from downed power lines. Crews are working as quickly as possible to restore service. For an update on outages in your area, visit www.sdge.com.



See, we do occasionally get real weather. Rain, winds, darkness…we’ll be talking about this week for the next six months. Any weather outside the usual 50-70 degrees, light winds, sunny makes the news for ages afterwards. Of course our inches of water pales in comparison to the tsunami-affected areas of the world. Tidal waves are things of our nightmares. Living along the coast as we do, it’s a frequent worry, and always a possibility. Even here I understand we had 8 foot waves as a result of that earthquake. Amazing.

Print
23 December
Comments

Blog about a blog about blogging

Take a few minutes and read this Shovelware entry in which Mark Dery shares his thoughts on what constitutes an interesting blog. He even wonders if the term “blog” isn’t just ugly and awkward enough to qualify for improvement. I would add that the term “blog” has now become a pejorative term in the general population, spoken with more than a little smirk in the tone. It makes me apologetic when I mention my blogs. “Journal” at least has maintained a bit dignity.

I agree with much of what Mark writes. I’m more a fan of the one-voice blog, even though bOING-bOING and Fark are two of my favorites. But they don’t give me a sense that I know the person behind them. I’d still rather read Doc Searls, Joi Ito, Chris Pirillo, and even Mark Dory. I still enjoy a conversation, even when it’s electronic. Dave Berry’s blog gives you a very general view of what qualifies as interesting to him, but that’s it. Doc shows you pictures out his window, then discusses the current state of online publishing, or his recent trip to England. Always interesting, always personal.

But I haven’t gotten caught up in the “newsy” blogs much. I admire those with enough time and the proper connections to be able to practice electronic journalism that’s as good or better than that provided in print or on television. -I like that major news services are having to credit bloggers with having broken a few important stories, or at least providing the flame that begets the fire. And I’m not surprised or bothered by the bias expressed in their coverage. It’s that personal voice thing again. But I’m more philosophical than topical, so I simply don’t read that many of them. I do like Andrew Sullivan, because he’ll speak forth on esoteric and often unpopular themes.

Print
21 December
Comments

Spreading the…joy?

Not exactly, unless you enjoy the effects of influenza.

Of course I haven’t helped the situation any. I sit and complain about people that come to work with a cold or the flu in an environment in which we share confined spaces and headphones and wind up infecting me…while I too am at work. My excuse is that as a new employee I don’t qualify for sick pay until after 90 days. But in truth, none of us is wealthy enough to be missing work very often. So this bug is sure to be going around for a while yet.

I now believe one of the worst jobs to have with an illness that causes you to sneeze and cough constantly and clogs your sinuses completely is one that requires you to talk to people on the phone 8 hours a day. It has to qualify as a form of torture. I’ll bet I took half the number of calls last night that I usually do, simply because I had to pause after each one to blow my nose and pop a coughdrop in my mouth.

And my attitude really takes a dive when I don’t feel well. I’m one of those cranky sick people. It takes all my 20+ years of customer service skills to remain pleasant and upbeat on the phone. I’ve noticed that it’s also very difficult to troubleshoot a problem when your brain is fuzzy with antihistamines. Usually I try to think in a flow-chart fashion, from easy to hard, simple to complex. Hopped up on DayQuil, my mind seems to wander all over the place. “Oh shoot, let’s go back to device manager for the third time and let’s check another thing I should have had you check the last two times we were there.” Blah…I hate doing that to people. At least they know I’m not following a script. No one would write a script that screwy.

Print
14 December
Comments

No, the crises ain’t over

But I was getting tired of that online mid-life crises thing. It was one of those “good ideas at the time”.

Instead I decided to give this blog a more general title, the name I would have given to my bar in the Bahamas had life taken me in that direction. But I never got to be another Jimmy Buffett. Hell, I never got to be another Warren Buffett. Just another cat in cyberspace.

My love for jazz is the inspiration for the Juke Joint subtitle. If I’d have been around in the 40’s, I’d have had a juke joint downtown somewhere, a smokey place with live jazz and beer, conversation and marijuana. Basie and Mingus hanging out in the back room, while Peterson held the stage for a set or two. Red neon and Blue Moon.

Oh yeah…dig it

Print
11 December
Comments

Low man with totem pole

I’ve had a few jobs where I was able to move from new hire to management in six months. I even worked for a company in the ’70s in which I was able to go from part-timer to Vice President within a year.

But I’ve never before now worked for a company that on my third day of employment invited me to sit down with the head of operations and several others to discuss the future developement of the company. And this was not a “welcome to the job” type meeting. This was a true working session, with input welcome and noted and good ideas incorporated into the planning documents as we talked.

I’m amazed, and impressed. To have the #2 man in the company (actually he’s the #1 man, as the company’s president is a woman) asking me direct questions and listening to my responses…not just listening but noting down and including in the planning documents my suggestions…made me realize that here is a medium-sized company (perhaps 300 people at this location) that doesn’t just say they value their employees, but proves it by recognizing experience within it’s employee pool and taking advantage of that experience, even when it involves someone they’ve only known for a few days. It has certainly given me a reason to try and make this opportunity work to not just my benefit, but the company’s as well. I’m always willing to offer my loyalty to a company or group that is willing to reward it by showing loyalty in return. I hope that turns out to be the case here.

Print
10 December
Comments

Amazing, I’ve survived two days…

…on this job and thus far no one has died or even been seriuosly injured. I think that’s pretty good considering the circumstances.

Tomorrow’s only my third day on the desk, and already I’ve been invited to a meeting being conducted on new directions the management wants to take the company in, particularly a pay-for-call help desk setup. Well, I do have a bit of experience at that, and have a few opinions on the concept, so I guess I’ll attend and see how much my 2 cents are worth in the corporate world.

Print
10 December
Comments


This job is not having any effect on me at all.

Print
08 December
Comments

The fine print

Thank you so much, Alibris. Tonight I was able to locate and order two books I’ve been seeking for a couple of years. “I Had a Dog and a Cat” by Karel Capek, a book I read 15 years ago, was the hardest to locate. It’s never been reprinted since 1947, and while I have a copy that’s in good condition already, I wanted a reading copy. Capek, better known for writing “R.U.R.” in 1920, and giving the term robot to the science fiction community, penned this lovely little story about the trials and joys of living with his dog and cat in 1940 that just makes me feel wonderful every time I read it. His use of the language, even when translated from the original Czech, is so tight that it nearly qualifies as poetry.

I was also able to pick up a copy of “Religion and the Rebel” by Colin Wilson. Wilson wrote the book that first woke me up in my twenties and made me start to think about my life and beliefs. That book, “The Outsider”, says more about me than I’m usually comfortable having people know. “Religion and the Rebel” picks up where “The Outsider” left off, discussing in even more depth existentialism and the famous people who personified the “outsider” in society.

As I wrote in a review of “The Outsider” for Amazon in 2000, “For over 15 years this has been my favorite book. Wilson explicates a thesis – that much of great Western Literature is written by and concerns men who see and feel more deeply than their contemporaries. Perhaps one might regard them as more sensitive. At any rate, such men are alienated-hence outsiders. Such figures include: Hermann Hesse, Van Gogh, Hemmingway, Lawrence of Arabia, H.G. Wells, Albert Camus, Vaslav Nijinsky, Sartre, Tolstoy, and others.

This book can be used in many ways: as a primer to existential philosophy, an introduction to religious mysticism, or as an introduction to the work and thoughts some of the greatest artists and writers of the 19th and 20th centuries.

Understanding of this book is helped by familiarity with the works and artists Wilson discusses – but it’s not necessary. Wilson’s discussion of each work/artists is complete enough even without prior exposure. And, indeed, it would be hard to have exposure to all he includes. In a way that, too, is a plus. I used this book as a core curriculum for nearly everything I’ve studied. I read what Wilson had to say, and if I was interested, I’d then explore those artists myself.”

Since existentialism is a philosophy and not a religion, many of those who read “The Outsider” thought that Wilson was selling out with “Religion and the Rebel” when they first saw the title. But what Wilson discusses is religion in the sense of a passion, a fascination with something beyond and grander than the individual. In that sense, you could describe my interest in the Internet as a religion, considering the role it plays in my life.

I’ve never owned a copy of this book, so I’m very pleased to have found a copy in good condition at a reasonable price so I can add it to my “special” bookcase. Those are the books I doubt I’ll ever part with, and include the 3 volume set of H.L. Mencken”s “The American Language” and the science fiction novels of Stanislaw Lem, famous for “Solaris” (which has twice been made into terrible movies but was a brilliant book) but also the author of several amazing stories including my favorite “Memoirs Found In a Bathtub”, which reminds me of my time at NSA (to quote a review, “A paranoid story from the year 3149 in a world without paper. The protagonist is given a mission so secret that nobody has a clearance to tell it to him. Spies, counter-spies and counter-courter-spies stand in his way as he attempts to solve the mystery of his mission”)

So once I get tired of reading about routers and wireless access points for work, I can take my pick of two better works to distract myself from computers for a while.

Print
06 December
Comments

Welcome fellow LangaList readers

I’m pleased to see so many of you stopping by to see what’s going on. I wish I knew.

But since you’re here, and obviously in a “clicking” mood, why not click your way on over to my forum, Jeber’s Help Desk. If you like what you see there, join up. Share your knowledge, your interests and your thoughts with me and my friends. It’s a forum for the more mature computer user. No game cheats, no warez, no music downloads. Just a small group of us who realize there’s more to life than a computing, or are at least trying to maintain a life beyond the keyboard. My main web page is at Jebers.com.

And thanks again for visiting.

Print
04 December
Comments

If you own a D-Link product…

make damn sure that by Monday you’ve done all your firmware upgrades, read your manuals and asked all your necessary questions, because it looks like, due to some obvious breech in the fabric of space-time, or perhaps as a cruel joke perpetrated by the gods to amuse themselves, as of Monday, December 6th, 2004, a day that will live in infamy, I will be answering your networking questions at the call center that I’ll be calling home until they finally catch on to the fact that I haven’t the foggiest clue what I’m going to be talking about, since the very thing in the realm of computing I know the least about has to be networking, although I don’t know much about how to add more blinky-lights to my laptop, either, but the odds of my learning how to add more blinky-lights to Gromet are much better than my really understanding networking, so I’l have a hundred little blinky-lights scattered in delightful patterns around my Toshiba’s case long before I’ve managed to get your wireless notebook to connected through your wired router to your cable modem box and out onto the Internet while at the same time trying to DMZ your Xbox so you can get back to your online Halo game.

This should be interesting…

Print