June 14, 2016
Mama Goose out for a walk
There have been a couple of families of goosies around, though they haven't shown up very often. This is what they looked like on June 3.
And this is what the smaller family looked like today. They're starting to fledge already, and the young 'uns have put on a lot of weight.
What I find a bit disturbing is that I haven't seen any ducklings. Usually there are two or three duck hens with baby duckies hanging around here but not this year. I would think the geese chased them away except that today is the first time since June 3 that the geese have been around.
Posted by: Steven Den Beste in Daily Life at
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Dreams of our daughters
Last night I dreamed that Team Anko appeared in the middle of... something... I had been dreaming about, and it turned out they were phantoms. Eventually Maho showed up in her Tiger, too.
I think I've been watching too much anime...
Posted by: Steven Den Beste in Daily Life at
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June 07, 2016
Dammit, Fedex!
So I ordered a couple more of those 512G flash drives, and they were supposed to be delivered today. The Fedex tracking site says my package was left at my door at 12:20, but it's not there, 2 hour later.
Probably the driver left it at the wrong building, and if so and if I'm lucky and my neighbor is honest, then when they come home they'll find it and bring it to me. I'd go out and search the complex for it except that I can't walk anymore. I'm tempted to start complaining but I really should wait until tomorrow.
Screw it; I'm going to take a nap.
UPDATE: It's after 8, and I can't figure out how to reach a real person at Fedex in a timely manner, so I got into the NewEgg customer service page. After following lots of links and then filling out a form, I was able to get into a chat session with a customer service rep named "Duncan D." (ostensibly; wouldn't surprise me if that isn't really his name) and he did good.
He's going to do the "package tracing" thing with Fedex and if they can't satisfy him, he'll issue me a refund. Considering it was about $500, that's a good thing. (If it had been $30, I would have just let it go.)
Posted by: Steven Den Beste in Daily Life at
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June 06, 2016
Lights out
Power failures are a pain in the butt. We had one this morning, about an hour ago. It only lasted about a minute, but all my computers went down, and I had to reset all my clocks.
We take reliable power for granted, and PGE (Portland General Electric) does a really good job overall. So it's really a surprise when it really does happen, kind of like being blindsided by a sucker punch.
Posted by: Steven Den Beste in Daily Life at
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1
It must have been pretty localized. My stuff was still on over by Elmonica.
Posted by: CatCube at June 06, 2016 08:14 PM (fa4fh)
2
Yeah, PGE does a great job, I can only recall one outage since I moved here 8 years ago. PG&E down in Los Angeles was close, but not quite that good, there were more "freak accidents" like transformers blowing in a storm or squirrels frying themselves on a line and taking it out.
Posted by: David at June 07, 2016 12:34 AM (YHSti)
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June 01, 2016
Lunch
I've always eaten my grilled cheese sandwiches with ketchup. Been doing that since I was a kid. Of course, what I was eating in those days wasn't technically "grilled cheese" because it was Velveeta, which legally speaking isn't cheese.
The FDA has a legal definition of "cheese" and Velveeta doesn't qualify. If you look at the package Kraft doesn't claim that it's cheese. They used to call it "Pasteurized Process Cheese food", and then "Pasteurized Process Cheese Spread", and the FDA issued a warning letter, so now it's called "Pasteurized Prepared Cheese Product", which apparently the FDA doesn't mind. Bureaucrats will be the death of us all.
Now my Grilled Cheese Sandwich is really cheese, however. My cheese is Tillamook Sharp Cheddar. I've tried Vermont cheddar and I've tried Wisconsin cheddar, and to me they just don't measure up. Tillamook is an area on the Oregon coast which is nearly perfect for raising dairy cattle, and the Tillamook County Creamery Association is a farm cooperative that all the dairy farmers belong to that processes their milk and sells it. They do all the things you expect from a dairy (milk, cream, butter, ice cream) but cheese is their main product.
Tillamook sharp cheddar makes good sandwiches. And it's good for everything else that cheese is good for. (I add it to my lasagna.) I grate a pound at a time and keep it in a plastic box in my fridge.
As to the ketchup, a lot of people tell me that's "really weird", but I like it, so to heck with what other people think. (When did I ever care about that?) One of the big problems for me about living in Massachusetts was that I couldn't get Tillamook cheese there. One of the reliefs when I moved to San Diego was that I could get it there. And of course, back here in Beaverton it's readily available.
If you like that sort of thing (I don't) the fields there are also a good place to find Psilocybin mushrooms, or so I've been told.
UPDATE: Around these parts, Tillamook is also famous because of the "Tillamook Burn", one of the largest forest fires in Oregon history. In 1933 350,000 acres went up in smoke. My mom was a kid in Salem at the time, and she said the smoke made it look like night-time.
Starting in the 1950's, there was a massive effort at reforestation, and that finished in the 1970's because they had reforested it all. The area is now known as the "Tillamook State Forest" and they've started logging in it again.
Posted by: Steven Den Beste in Daily Life at
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1
I'll have to give that "Tillamook" a try. I love a good grilled cheese sandwich, though I usually dunk mine in Campbell's tomato soup. It's all in how you were raised, I guess.
Can't eat Mac and cheese without the ketchup, though. Practically lived on tuna-mac in college. Mac and cheese, ketchup, tunafish, and peas. Yum! (My 7 year old son loves it, too.)
Posted by: Brett Bellmore at June 01, 2016 03:14 PM (l55xw)
2
The cheese of my youth was
pinconning, though. Cheese capital of Michigan.
Posted by: Brett Bellmore at June 01, 2016 03:18 PM (l55xw)
3
Cheese is made everywhere, of course, but when I think of distinctive cheeses, Michigan is not a state that comes to mind.
(Probably Oregon doesn't either, for most people.)
Posted by: Steven Den Beste at June 01, 2016 04:21 PM (+rSRq)
4
Heh. We (and by "we" I mean "me") go through a pound of Tillamook a week. Love the extra sharp cheddar, but it's pretty friable and tough to cut thin.
Posted by: Tex Lovera at June 01, 2016 05:44 PM (DZFjF)
Posted by: Wonderduck at June 01, 2016 06:10 PM (X/kQu)
6
The "extra sharp" is too strong for me. But that's OK; we don't have to like the same things.
Posted by: Steven Den Beste at June 01, 2016 06:53 PM (+rSRq)
7
Even where I grew up, there was a cheese factory....
http://www.cityofardmoretn.com/history.htm (last paragraph).
The cheese they made was a bit too sharp for my tastes.
Posted by: Mark A. Flacy at June 01, 2016 07:38 PM (ATlQg)
8
It's available here, but it looks like only the extra sharp special reserve cheddar is. I wonder what their colby jack is like.
Posted by: muon at June 01, 2016 08:05 PM (IUHrD)
9
It's OK. It's softer and less strongly flavored than the sharp cheddar, and it melts easier.
Posted by: Steven Den Beste at June 01, 2016 08:08 PM (+rSRq)
Posted by: Steven Den Beste at June 01, 2016 08:09 PM (+rSRq)
11
I meant to make a trip to the Tillamook Cheese Factory this weekend, but got involved in some stuff at home. I know this is odd, but I still prefer the Kraft singles for grilled cheese sandwiches. I eat the Tillamook cheddar as a snack.
Their ice cream is to die for, as well.
Posted by: CatCube at June 01, 2016 08:23 PM (fa4fh)
12
"but when I think of distinctive cheeses, Michigan is not a state that comes to mind."
While it's true that Pinconning IS the cheese making capital of Michigan, it's also very much a provincial capital; Don't blink while driving through, or you'll miss it.
Good cheese, though. I once had a block of 25 year Pinconning, (The sales clerk explained they'd misplaced it in the warehouse.) It was more spice than cheese, it was so sharp, but it was great for grating into other cheese dishes.
Posted by: Brett Bellmore at June 02, 2016 01:36 AM (l55xw)
13
Sorry about that.
I was surprised when the link wasn't autodetected and surprised again when I couldn't edit the result.
And, yes, that's why there is a button labeled "Preview" in plain sight.
Posted by: Mark A. Flacy at June 02, 2016 04:47 PM (ATlQg)
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May 24, 2016
A race!
So my order to NewEgg was for two flash disks and two cans of compressed air "dusters", and as always seems to be the case Newegg divided them into two orders and shipped from two locations.
The flash disks shipped from Oakland by Fedex overnight, and Fedex tracking says they're at the Portland sort facility and on track to deliver today "before 8 PM".
The dusters shipped from Tukwila, WA by UPS overnight, and UPS tracking says it's in Portand and on track to deliver "by end of day".
So who will win the race, Fedex or UPS? Stay tuned...
UPDATE: AND THEY'RE OFF! UPS tracking shows "Out for delivery" as of 0701.
UPDATE: Fedex shows the package at Lake Oswego as of 0817.
UPDATE: Starting from the pit lane, Fedex now reports the package on a truck out for delivery at 0852.
UPDATE: And there's the checkered flag! 1220 Fedex wins. Now to see how well these memory sticks work.
UPDATE: I might have known; like all mass storage makers, they're using 109 as a "gig" instead of 230. Windows says 468G.
UPDATE: And a 22G transfer went at 33 MB/s, compared to about 12 MB/s for the USB2 drives. I think we have a winner here.
UPDATE: And UPS limps across the finish line at 1320. And now I can go take a nap, thank goodness, because I really need one.
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"a 22G transfer went at 33 MB/s"
That's not too shabby. Unfortunately it seems to be really hard to find speed benchmarks of flash drives, and the claimed "up to" speeds are...optimistic. It appears that most people just want cheap storage and aren't overly concerned with speed.
Posted by: RickC at May 24, 2016 06:21 PM (FvJAK)
2
Neither am I, frankly. The USB2 flash drives were painfully slow, but these new ones are acceptable.
I suspect it's the NAS that's gating this; it was never very fast.
Posted by: Steven Den Beste at May 24, 2016 06:30 PM (+rSRq)
3
It's definitely the NAS that's throttling the transfer. I copied one of my anime directories to my local drive (about 30 MB/s), and from there to the flash drive, which was 220 MB/s.
That NAS has always crawled.
Posted by: Steven Den Beste at May 24, 2016 07:03 PM (+rSRq)
4
And in one afternoon I backed up my entire anime collection onto these two flash disks, both of which are now full. Except I didn't back up Dragon Ball (330G) or Fairy Tail (118G).
I think I'll order a couple more of these flash drives. There's other stuff I'd like to archive.
Posted by: Steven Den Beste at May 24, 2016 09:50 PM (+rSRq)
5
I wish Flash memory was shelf-stable... I make backups to spinning disks because I'm worried that I'll leave a Flash drive disconnected from power for too long (a year or two), and it'll stop being a backup. But then I worry that the mechanical parts of the spinning drives will fail, and those drives will stop being backups...
Anyone know a cure for chronic worrywartism? Other than multiple backups?
Posted by: Mikeski at May 24, 2016 11:01 PM (A8RoD)
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May 15, 2016
A public apology
I seem to have spoiled Wonderduck's fun regarding this week's F1 race in Barcelona. I'm very sorry; I thought I had waited long enough, but apparently not.
Next time I'll keep my typing fingers in my pocket.
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I generally don't watch the 6am or 7am races live... I'm not usually awake quite yet. It's the races at midnight or 1am that I'll usually watch, even though they'll end at 4am Pond Central.
Posted by: Wonderduck at May 15, 2016 09:17 PM (XQ5ac)
2
Even assuming Wonderduck was watching it live, not all his readers were. We do exist
Posted by: David at May 15, 2016 10:31 PM (YHSti)
3
Thank you for piling on and making me feel even worse.
Posted by: Steven Den Beste at May 16, 2016 06:41 AM (+rSRq)
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Livestock report
No sign of any baby ducks yet this year, which is a bit surprising. But we've got three goslings, which first showed up about three days ago. I tossed some bread out for them and they dutifully posed for your pleasure.
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January 22, 2016
Snowmuppet?
I hope that Brickmuppet's legendary bad luck decides to take this weekend off. He, and everyone else in eastern Virginia, are going to have enough trouble as it is.
They're saying that DC might get three feet of snow, which would be amusing. The mayor of DC has already apologized for not handling it well, even before the snow began to fall.
Posted by: Steven Den Beste in Daily Life at
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As another DC area resident, the news story is conflating two similar stories. There was an unexpected and very badly timed dusting of snow on Wednesday, which people were not prepared for and messed up rush hour. That's what the mayor has been apologizing for. It took everyone by surprise. While DC's government is incompetent at best, the Wednesday snow was exactly at the wrong time to screw up rush hour, so it's understandable. The locals are prepared for the massive storm that is now visible outside my window, as much as possible.
Posted by: Civilis at January 22, 2016 03:45 PM (KlrGc)
2
IIRC, Brickmuppet lives somewhere near Norfolk. He isn't in DC.
Posted by: Steven Den Beste at January 22, 2016 11:11 PM (+rSRq)
3
The snow is practically gone down here. We had 3 inches this morning and its just patches now. Just west of us though it's bad.
Posted by: The Brickmuppet at January 24, 2016 02:49 PM (AaBUm)
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January 03, 2016
I woke up this morning and looked out my window
Posted by: Steven Den Beste in Daily Life at
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Is that a lot or a little, for where you live?
Posted by: Boviate at January 03, 2016 02:20 PM (XRvFv)
2
That's about all we ever get, when we do. We get about that much snow maybe every two years (if not three). And since it's above freezing out, it isn't going to last.
I remember when I was a kid we would sometimes get real snow, maybe a foot deep. But that didn't happen very often either, which is part of why it's memorable to me.
Probably the worst was in 1964. We got a whole lot of snow, and then a warm front came through, the temperature went up 40 degrees, and it all melted in one day. It's known in these parts as the "Christmas Flood" because all the rivers went out of their banks.
But that was a hundred-year-flood. Hasn't been anything like that since I moved back here.
Posted by: Steven Den Beste at January 03, 2016 03:56 PM (+rSRq)
3
What we get instead is freezing rain. That happens a lot, and sometimes it's pretty spectacular.
The Cascades act as a kind of climatic curtain. Between the Cascades and the coast, the whole are is warmed by ocean effect. East of the Cascades the weather is much more like you'd expect for this lattitude. Sometimes there's a wind that blows really cold air down the Columbia Gorge (which is a hole in the curtain) and meanwhile we get warm wet air off the Pacific -- and they meet in Portland. The warm air makes rain but when it reaches the ground the air is below freezing.
I remember one ice storm where I stood next to a big forested are and listened to branches falling. Every few seconds there would be a crash. When it gets REALLY bad it also brings down power lines, which is a pain for everyone not to mention really dangerous.
Here in Beaverton we mostly miss that. The "West Hills" act as another curtain, so the cold air from Eastern Oregon doesn't make it here. It pools in the Willamette valley instead. So if Beaverton gets freezing rain at all, it usually melts off rapidly. But sometimes over in Portland it stays cold and icy for days after an ice storm.
Posted by: Steven Den Beste at January 03, 2016 04:05 PM (+rSRq)
4
On the monday after Xmas, we had something strange occur here in Duckford: 3.5" inches of sleet, followed by 1/4" of freezing rain, followed by an inch of snow.
To say the drive home from work was ugly is something of an understatement.
Posted by: Wonderduck at January 03, 2016 07:27 PM (zAcee)
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