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6FPS V6#3: March 11, 2024

chuqvr@gmail.com@chuqvr@fosstodon.orgchuq.me

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Welcome to the new issue of 6FPS.

The weather has gotten wintry, and we ended up with a couple of inches of snow, but it all melted off in about a day. Despite our neighbors saying snow never happens here, it looks like this has become routine once or twice a winter, and when La Niña is in full bellow, we can get significant white stuff. I’m kind of getting used to it.

I do have to keep reminding myself that when I go out and about in 40 degree weather yes, I do need to put my stupid gloves on. I’m being a slow learner about that.

Oh, and we had one bit of fun: the water heater decided to die. The good news is we were able to get it replaced with effectively no chaos, so we’re good for another ten years or so…. The missing part for the generator has finally arrived, so it should be online by the time you read this as well; fortunately, we haven’t needed it this winter, but… figuring out it’s bad when you absolutely need it is a bad thing…

Vertigo Update

In the last couple of weeks I was able to meet with the Neurologist about possible migraines triggering the vertigo. That was a very productive discussion, although as he noted, there is no test to diagnose a migraine, especially the kind I think I’m having, which are called Migraines with Aura, or also Ocular Migraines — migraines that don’t cause pain.

He outlined five standard steps of treatment for migraines, each step being, effectively, more powerful drugs with more enthusiastic side effects. I’ve started on the first phase, and I have to say, things have gotten a lot better. Way better.

That said, I don’t have a formal diagnosis yet, so I’m waiting for next week’s followup discussion before I claim we know what the issue is. But I’m very hopeful. I’ll go into more detail on this once it’s confirmed and I know what he suggests in terms of long-term management.

Before I started this round of treatment, I started rating each day (1 = “just shoot me”, 10 = “perfect) so I’d have a baseline to compare against, and I’ve been continuing that rating as well. Before I started the new treatments, my average was 6.8 (“meh”). Since, it’s 8.

Needless to say, my energy levels and attitude have both improved a lot. I’ve spent a lot of the last month digging into the garage and shop and rounding it all into shape, and it was nice to spend extended time out there without feeling off whenever I bent over.

More later, but I think we’re on the right track.

Shop Update

Since last month I’ve been putting a lot of effort into the shop and garage. I started by doing some minor re-organizing in the shop, and, well, 20 hours later, I more or less moved everything around. Some of that was improving how things are stored, but I also moved my work desk and work table around and pulled my C-stand out of the hidden depths and set up the work table so I can pull it out and move around it when I’m working on a project, and also use the C-stand and lighting for desktop photography again, which I’ve wanted to set up for a few months. I also ended up doing that first “post move” purge of stuff that got put into the garage in case we needed it, and some 20 boxes of stuff has now headed off to Goodwill so someone else can give it a second life.

The shop itself is taking shape; I’ve got another 10-15 hours into it this last month. That built in workbench I needed to remove has, in fact, been removed, which allowed me to start moving around the tools and get things into their “proper” location. The workbench is now under the window, so I can look out when I’m working on it, and I have the various power tools in places where I think they make sense, and I’m happy with the way I can move around the shop. I have also bought a couple of new tools, a jointer and planer, and once I get them set up, until I decide I am ready to bring in a lathe, the shop is complete.

First project is a work table that I’ll build the table saw into, so I have something I can use for assembly and project work, and which will act as an outfeed table for the saw. I also will probably built a router table into it, but likely not right away. I have some basic plans drawn and it’ll be an interesting first project to work on,.

Glad to have finally gotten over the hump here; removing that built in workbench intimidated me, but in practice, it wasn’t all that hard. I’ve left one corner in place since that’s useful for things like my battery chargers, but it may come out someday as well. All of the reorganization helped me find and pull together about nine different projects where I’d bought materials but never actually finished them; seven of those are now done, and one of those still pending required me getting the table saw set up and aligned, so I hope to finish that off soon. Feels nice to not have so many of the “ought to do” staring at me with sad, empty eyes….

Possible Tripping

The trip I’ve been hoping to happen hasn’t happened yet, because with everything else going on, it really didn’t make sense (hint: don't travel when you’re changing the drugs you take until you know how you’re going to react to them). It’s getting late to go do winter birding at the refuges, but I expect to take a few days in late March, after my next talk with the neurologist, to do some birding and perhaps head down to Bandon and Newport for a bit of exploring and relaxing.

Free Prints Delayed

I am running months behind in getting the free prints out. My apologies for the delay; everything from printer issues to the vertigo has gotten in the way. I’m going to try to get them all printed and shipped before the April issue of 6FPS comes out.

Making Things

When I retired, one thing I started thinking about were things I wanted to do to keep busy, but were which I could do here at the house and not need to go running around or be in the shop. Idle time amusements. I kept coming around to model making — I did a lot of building plastic models as a kid, as well as having things like Lincoln Logs and an Erector Set.

I’m old enough that my chilldhood making time mostly predated Legos, and so I have to admit I’ve never worked with them — until now. Trying to find a plastic model kit I wanted to build, I just never found one I really cared about, so ultimately, I ended up asking for (and getting) a Lego kit and a kit from Rokr to try out.

The Lego kit is their bonsai tree kit, and the finished version is below. I found putting it together fun and a bit of a challenge, but it wasn’t super complicated, and the bonsai ties back into my younger days as well, because at one point in my life I had four bonsai (including a beautiful black pine) I took care of; I also ended up killing them from neglect during a crazy work period at Apple, of course.

So getting myself another bonsai has been in the back of my mind for a long time as well, but I’ve waited until I was sure I was ready to not neglect them again. I’m still pondering whether I want to dive back into live bonsai, but until I do, at least now I have this to sit on my desk and stare at when I’m pondering life’s deep issues.

There will be more Lego builds in the future, I think.

  • Nothing new this month (been in the shop)

So, the fun this month was that the water heater died. This was no surprise, since I knew it was going on 15 years old and that means it was close to the end of it’s expected life. It was on my todo list to get it replaced this spring, but it had other ideas, and I walked into the utility room to replace the furnace filter, and immediately noticed the rust streaks on the heater.

I had plumbers out here about 2 hours later (on a Friday afternoon), signed on on a quote for a fair change of money, and early Monday morning they showed up again and in under 2 hours, I had a new water heater, and I don’t have to think about it (I hope) for another decade (the plumber suggested 7-10 years).

This has me thinking about the issues of Preventive Maintenance and Technical Debt.

Having spent about a decade working in IT for Apple, I long ago learned about the joys of trying to dig out from Technical Debt. It is the bane of your existence, and a constant treadmill you need to walk just to keep things from blowing up badly.

Typically, of course, we all fail at properly managing Technical Debt, and I never worked for a company that ever felt like it had it well managed — well, maybe that’s not true, but the ones that did were the ones that generally did it the worst.

I’m guilty of it as well. On one of my big projects, we had a disk blow out on our main MySQL server, and we were down for 13 hours until I could get a replacement system up and synced up with the data. The sad part of that: I knew this was a huge reliability gap, and I was about two weeks from rolling out replicated servers and a hot spare to fail over to for just that potential problem. It was not a fun day.

But because of the kind of work I did, I learned to be very wary of building out technical debt. Since most of the work I did for Apple involved open source software, I got very picky about tool selection and making sure whatever packages we adopted had good support communities around them; if the interest in them dried up, I started evaluating alternatives. Because of this, I’m proud to have been able to help Apple IT shift from being a “open source is poison” mindset more towards “it can be useful when managed properly”, and I had very few problems caused by the tools we adopted.

I try to do the same in my personal life. I am “that guy” who does actually replace hard drives every 3-4 years, and the last time I had a drive fail on a personal/work system while in use the laptop in question ran a PowerPC chip. I have lost data a few times, but it’s always been through operator stupidity, not hardware/software failure. I’m also “that guy” who’s pretty paranoid about backups, and with a couple of exceptions, that has also protected me pretty well against being that idiot operator, which I occasionally am.

I try to treat the house that way as well. When we moved to Washington, one thing I did was identify craft vendors for the various parts of the house, and since I had a feeling some of them had been a bit neglected in their ongoing maintenance, I started bringing them in to do an evaluation. Overall, we’ve found things to be in pretty good shape, and we have relationships with vendors that are now familiar with our setups so if we need to bring them in, they have some idea what’s going on.

The one craft I hadn’t brought in yet was, of course, plumbing. And it bit me, fortunately, in a minimally bad way; the heater was still usable for the couple of days we had until the new one went in, although I watched it for signs it was getting worse. I’d say overall we can’t even call it a fire drill. It helps a lot that I had researched plumbers and new which firm I intended to call — do you have a list of crafts you can call if something goes wrong?

So, replacing the water heater is making this month an expensive one, but it’s getting even more expensive: I had the company we use to maintain our well system out for the annual maintenance, and had a nice chat with them about expected lifetimes of well pumps, and, not surprisingly, we’re at that point where it makes sense to replace it before it breaks, so they’re getting me a quote, and we’re going to get it updated as well.

And because one of the projects I’ve been meaning to get to is adding a wash sink to the workshop, I’ve got a quote for that, and while it (and a couple of smaller projects) are going to end up costing as much as the water heater, I’m going to get that done as well. After that, I’m going to stop spending money for a while, but other than the ongoing reliability of the emergency generator (which I’m hoping we get resolved in a couple of weeks when some ordered parts come in), everything else about the house is in good shape and should go a number of years before we have major issues again. The oldest thing in the house now is the furnace, but when I had them come out, they felt it had a good lifetime ahead of it.

If you own a home, you should have your utility systems checked out on some regular basis; at the very least, you should have that list of people to call when something breaks, because there’s nothing quite as stressful as having a dead furnace or a leaking water heater and madly searching the internet hoping to find a competent company to come on no notice to deal with it. A bit of time spent up front can really reduce the number of times you get to play the “stressed to the gills” game hoping that whatever broke doesn’t turn into tens of thousands of dollars of repair bills.

Oh, and how old again is that hard drive in your laptop? And when did you last back up your data?

As I create new images and re-process older ones, I post them on my site in the Recent Work area. Additionally, every Wednesday is Photo Wednesday on the blog, where I post one of my non-bird images, and the bird images are posted on the blog each week as part of Feathery Friday.

I got out three times last month, which was nice. Only got four decent photos out of those trips, which is better than nothing but none of them are superior; official status: useful minion and spear carrier. The one below is of a nice adult Western Gull, which the Merlin app suggested should be a Herring gull. A nice, quite reminder not to over-rely on Merlin because it can be unreliable at times. Getting this one wrong really surprised me, though, since that should be a quite straight-forward ID for Merlin (the Herring Gull would have light colored eyes).

I am, at least, producing some images again, which is great. And as I write this, tomorrow I’m going to head out in search of a Redhead (a duck! honest) that has been hanging around a nearby lake for the last week — and maybe score Canvasback and Ruddy Duck as well. With, hopefully, pictures.

I have eight e-books available. All are free for you to download and read with no obligation. You can download them from my e-book page on the web site.

These are the books that are available:

  • Birding 101: Hints and Tips for the New Birder

  • Merced National Wildlife Refuge

  • And the Geese Exploded: A Life With Birds

  • Birds of Santa Clara County

  • 2021.1: A Year of Transitions

  • 2020.1: Images from the year when Covid changed everything

  • 2019 (1)

  • 2019 (2)

Free Wallpapers just for Subscribers

New Wallpapers (August, 2023). A new set of 12 wallpapers are now available.

You can download this new set from the 6FPS Secret Wallpaper. The previous set of wallpapers are now with the full public set at Public Wallpaper page.

These are available only to you, my favorite people who happen to be subscribers to 6FPS. The previous set of images I released here are now available to the general public.

This is a small gift to you to thank you for being a subscriber. You are welcome to use any or all of them if you wish, but please: don't share the private hangout link with others, encourage them to subscribe via https://www.chuq.me/6fps instead. Thanks.

Free Prints to Subscribers

Anyone who’s interested in a free 8x10 print of one of my images si welcome to it. All you need to do is check out the images in one of the four portfolio galleries on my photography page, and then send me an email with the request, including the title of the image (or URL to the image), your name and a mailing address. My only requirement is that the email the request comes from must be a subscriber to 6FPS when I get the request. I will mail these out at no charge worldwide for any request I get during November, as quickly as I can make the prints and get them packaged up.

And with that, see you next issue!

6FPS (Six Frames Per Second) is a newsletter of interesting things and commentary from Chuq Von Rospach (chuqvr@gmail.com). 6FPS is Copyright © 2024 by Chuq Von Rospach. All Rights Reserved.

Coming out monthly on the 2nd Monday of the month, I will place in your inbox a few things I hope will inform and delight you. There is too much mediocre, forgettable stuff attacking your eyeballs every day you're online; this is my little way to help you cut through the noise to some interesting things you might otherwise not find.

Some links in this newsletter may point to products at Amazon; these are affiliate links and if you use them to buy a product, I get a small cut of the sale. This doesn't make me rich, but it does help pay my web site bills. If you use the link to buy something, thank you. If you prefer not to, that's perfectly okay, also.

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And with that, I'll see you in the next issue. I'd love feedback on this, what you like, what you want more of, what you want less of. And if you have something interesting you think I might want to talk about, please pass it along. Until then, take care, and have fun.

Chuq