We had a great time at an afternoon party at a friends house on July 4th. Here are Dave and the boys playing a bit of b-ball.Troy and Teo enjoying the pool.
Old pros in the pool by now!
Which one of us is wetter?
We had a great time at an afternoon party at a friends house on July 4th. Here are Dave and the boys playing a bit of b-ball.Troy and Teo enjoying the pool.
For this assignment, I set the building slightly into the ground so that four steps down were required to enter the building. I kept the lines very simple and clean.
I'm a little more forward at my current age and probably would ask the instructor if we could re-route the sidewalk to the other end of the building so that the audience would view the cemetery when facing the person speaking. Perhaps I did ask back then also and the answer came back "nyet". I just don't remember.
We awoke at 5:30 AM this morning to our Kidde 21006377-N KN-COSM-IBA Smoke and CO combination alarm going off. Since all eight of our detectors are wired together, the message "FIRE, FIRE, FIRE" was blasted through the house.
That was enough to rouse me out of bed. I checked the entire house - no fire. There were two rounds of that message. Each round lasted about a minute and they were spaced a few minutes apart. Then all went quiet for the rest of the day.
We installed those detectors in the summer of 2019 as our previous Kidde detectors were past their expiration date. Those prior Kidde detectors would say "Battery Low" when the batteries needed replacing, so there was some debate in our household on whether the batteries today were low (and the low battery message is not a part of these new detectors) or whether these new Kidde detectors actually though there was a fire. My wife let it be known that it didn't matter -we would be replacing the batteries immediately. Reading the manual, these detectors would have said "low battery" if it was indeed a battery problem, so they actually were detecting smoke in some manner.
The Kidde AA batteries that were in those detectors were about 2 years old as of now. My son tested one of them and it wasn't really all that low. I went to the store and bought Energizer Lithium AA batteries as replacement, and that is what we installed today. These new batteries have an expiration date of 12-2039, but I think we'll be replacing them in January 2023 just to be safe...we don't want that alarm blaring at us again!
The reason for this post is not because I think you all are super interested in our detectors. It is here as a reminder to my forgetful self as to when we last changed the batteries, and what batteries we used.
Also note to self: these new detectors take AA batteries, not 9-volt like the prior detectors!
I stumbled across this gem this week. It is my notes binder from my first computer science course at Cal State Chico on January 26, 1983.
The first time I logged into a computer was for this FORTRAN class. I had used punch cards for an Oklahoma State University course a couple of years prior, but never did I sit down at a screen and keyboard until this FORTRAN class.
Four years later, I was hired as a software engineer in San Diego which started an over 30 years career developing software. It is incredible to think that it all started on this page of this 38 year old binder.
I just looked up the teacher Michael Slavich on Linkedin. He apparently taught at Chico State for two more years before he launched into a 30+ year career at Hewlett-Packard. Thank you Michael for helping me launch a career of my own.
We went out to dinner at Miguel's. During dinner, Troy lost a tooth, a molar. He won't be losing too many more as he is quickly turning into a young man.
My instructor found a flaw in the design: the orientation of the pews meant that the person speaking would be standing where the roof pierces the ground, bringing the eye downward. He had a solution which involved a fairly large redesign that I'll show in a future post.
Looking at it today, I think the solution was much more simple: simply push the pews to the other end of the room and have those seated face the other direction. Place the stage on a platform above the Lecture Room with doors between the rooms placed on both sides of the stage. Those sitting in the pews would look up to the speaker and their eyes would naturally rise to the high point in the room, towards the heavens.