Archive for the 'LifeCrest VisionQuest' Category

The 2008 Scion tC… Now a memory.

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

Welp… I traded in the 2008 Scion tC.

I traded “down” to a 2009 Toyota Yaris.

Why would I do such a thing?

Well, the tC was barely 2 years old, but had 34,000 miles on it (Remember the LifeCrest VisionQuest), which means the warranty was going to run out a year early. Kind of a bummer.

The glass panel for the sunroof had been squeaking and rattling for some time. I’d really hate to have that become an issue out of warranty.

Plus, the driver seat had … lost … some of its… foamy comfort…? …and that made it not so comfortable to drive any more.

I’m operating on a thinner budget, now, so a more frugal “daily driver” wagon made sense… cheaper insurance, better on gas, taxes a little lower.

The tC had power windows and locks, which is “nice” but prone to failure out of warranty. It also had fairly pricey tires, which were approaching end-of-life.

…and the seat/door arrangement was kinda crummy for narrow parking spaces (and my one-car garage).

Of course the Yaris is no tC in terms of handling and acceleration, but… it’s not too bad. It’s better than the Rav4 I have :)

… oh, and the Yaris actually opens up a bunch of room in my garage, which is awesome!

Oh, yeah, and since I gave up smoking back in January, it’s nice to have a car that doesn’t smell like smoke :)

Yaris - no stickers yet

Yaris - from the front

Back from Washington, DC

Monday, July 20th, 2009

Wow! Washington is mental!

The the NASM’s Udvar-Hazy Center was quite a bit less crazy, and seemed to be more focused on straight-forward aviation, and not so much on “exhibits” as “artifacts”. There is less of a “Boo-yah! Go, USA!” feel to this facility. It’s more of a check it out, read the plaques, make up your own mind kind of thing. A little more my speed.

The main NASM exhibit space on the Mall in Washington is far more exhibit-ey, and USA-ey. I suppose you’d have to expect that from a museum on the national Mall. Of course, we happened to be there at a particularly chaotic time, when the 40th anniversary of the Apollo 11 landing was being observed. Buzz Aldrin, Mike Collins and Alan Bean were all selling and signing books. That added a level of lunacy… then there’s the regular touristy crowd, who may or may not know that Apollo really happened… and maybe even think that airplanes fly because gods make it so…. Belligerent, rude, careless people. Lots of them.

Then, we got to see the astronauts. Wow. It was the annual John Glenn Lecture. This year, the featured speakers were all three of the Apollo XI crew, along with Christopher Kraft. John Glenn, himself, also spoke.

First it was Glenn. His remarks were polite, considered, and inoffensive.

Then, came Kraft, whose remarks, as I recall them, were mostly recollections of the nervousness between liftoff and Lunar landing of Apollo XI.

Next was Buzz Aldrin. Aldrin wasted little time on platitudes, and went right into, “Why haven’t we landed on Mars yet?” I happen to agree with most of Aldrin’s arguments, and I am tired of the political timidity of US leadership.

Mike Collins spoke next, and as I expected, he was more philosophical than Aldrin. Collins strikes me as more of a “neutral” thinker with a healthy sense of humor. His remarks reflected that, and he focused more on the personal impact of having been to the Moon and returning. He closed his remarks with, “I guess you could put ‘Lucky’ on my tombstone, but not too soon.”

Finally Neil Armstrong came up. He focused on what he saw as the three catalysts for the mission to the Moon: Goddard, Governance, and Geophysics.

Here’s a little NY Daily News piece.

The remarks of these three ordinary who served as the face of a team of some 400,000 Americans who achieved something singularly remarkable were, themselves, remarkable in their perspective, thoughtfulness and frankness.

It’s just a shame that our countrymen can’t be persuaded to seriously consider their positions.

Weekend In Washington, DC

Friday, July 17th, 2009

The GF and I are in DC this weekend. Tomorrow, we’re heading to the National Air and Space Museum’s Udvar-Hazy Center, then going to he main building on The Mall on Sunday, where we’re going to see Neil Buzz and Mike chat about Apollo 11. Sweet.

I had originally planned to make this stop back in October on the VisionQuest, but this is groovy, too!

Gonna shoot vids and pix and so on…

More later.

Helpful, if brutally honest, post

Saturday, May 23rd, 2009

This post on the Church of No, Thanks site, in retrospect, was one of my finest moments in recent memory… sorry if I’m dislocating my shoulder patting myself on the back, here… but … Now that I’ve left the job that was causing me so much grief, I can publicly tip my hand.

I wrote the post specifically about my job, not about any other specific relationship I’m in. That is to say, the stress of my situation at work was the inspiration for writing the post on the CoNT site. It seemed to me that the process I was using to weigh my options could be abstracted to a fairly universal thought process, and there was an aspect of peer pressure to the tendency to preserve extant relationships, rather than severing them and finding new ones. It seemed like a good fit for the CoNT site, and 5 months on, I still think so.

I re-read The Line today, after having quit my job; after having taken my own advice… and I feel pretty good about it… not a euphoric “feel good”… more of a serene, peaceful “feel good”. I haven’t felt like this in a long time.

It’s been such a long time
I think I should be going, yeah
Time doesn’t wait for me
It keeps on rolling

–”Long Time”, Boston

I’d like to take this opportunity to thank everyone who helped me through this decision. Ultimately it was my decision to make, and I’m the one who has to live with the consequences, but it certainly was nice to have friends to, if nothing else, check my sanity.

Thanks everyone! You know who you are!

What am I doing Easter weekend?

Friday, April 3rd, 2009

I’m so tempted to GO!!!

New Image Gallery and Hundreds of LCVQ Photos

Sunday, January 4th, 2009

Ursuspacificus.net now has an image gallery (finally). It’s Gallery2 (software website here) and can be found athttp://www.ursuspacificus.net/imgal/.

As of right now, I have almost 200 pictures from Chaco Canyon uploaded, and am uploading Meteor Crater photos as I write this.

I don’t have any captions up yet… those will come in time, as will the rest of the LCVQ stills.

Please be patient :)

One thing I thought I’d never do…

Wednesday, December 3rd, 2008

… is found a religion.

Well, crap.

Don’t worry, I still don’t believe in gods, devils, faeries, Santa or The Easter Bunny.

“How,” you may ask, “can you have a religion without a god?”

Good question. While your common, off the shelf religion is typically centered on a god as a target of worship, praise and adoration, there’s usually more to it than that. Most religions have a social engineering aspect to them, and achieve their goals through intimidation, peer pressure and promise of reward in the afterlife for the righteous, and punishment for the naughty.

First, you can strip the god out of the equation pretty easily, and what you’re left with is a totalitarian regime. What if you could turn the social engineering on its head? What if, instead of operating on fear of a capricious invisible friend, you could operate a religion on promoting conscience, consciousness, personal liberty, personal responsibility, quality of life, and strength of will? You just might have a pretty powerful thing on your hands. If you could take the rituals and symbolism of religion, and use them as a tool for each individual to affirm the value of this life and his or her place in it, without straining credulity or forcing anything down their throats, you might just make the world a better place.

So, why not? Why not put together a philosophical framework and a social network and see if anybody bites?

Curious? Hop on over to The Church of No, Thanks

New LCVQ videos on YouTube

Sunday, November 9th, 2008

In the interest of helping this page load more quickly, I’m not embedding the videos here.

Here’s a few more videos from the trip:

First video shot on the trip… September 29, just 10 minutes into the trip… What on Earth would prompt me to shoot video just 10 minutes in?
Ten Minutes In…

A video tour of the 800-yard-wide blast depression at the Trinity Site. It was really windy, so the audio’s kinda crappy. Sorry :(
Trinity Ground Zero

After having seen the site, and eaten a radioactive burger… some final thoughts.
Summing Up at Trinity

I had a strange encounter with an antelope at the VLA.
VLA Antelope

I visted Johnson Space Center (well… “Space Center Houston”)
Final thoughts from the Johnson Space Center

I’ll be posting more later.

A few observations about America

Saturday, October 25th, 2008

America is a big country. With an average population density of 31 people per square mile. Put another way, there’s enough land for each man woman and child to have an 897,000 square foot (20 acre) buffer zone around them if they were evenly spread out. New York City, on the other hand, with its population of over eight million, and an average population density of around 26,000 per square mile, is certainly an aberration, but it does show that people tend to cluster together in this country. So… there’s a lot of open space out there. Most of the land area of Arizona, New Mexico and Texas are utterly barren. No farms, no nothing. How is it that we have not begun, in earnest, to deploy wind and solar energy collection? Is it the cost?

People in this country bitch ceaselessly about the expense of the space program. Generally, they don’t bitch about spending a trillion dollars over five years on a failed war we started. They hear about social programs that will cost 20 million dollars over 10 years, and they soil themselves with disgust. How does that work, exactly? … and where does the money for the war or the social programs come from, anyway?

Conservatives in the country (and they seem to operate the loudest, most obnoxious and inescapable media outlets) complain about “tax and spend liberals”… as opposed to what?… “print and spend conservatives”? I’m sick to death of people complaining about taxes, and then expecting the government to fix the roads, educate the children, provide health care, cover retirement and prosecute wars. The money has to come from SOMEWHERE… Where does it come from? Mostly taxes. Sorry kids, but if you want to have roads and schools and a standing army, all that costs money, and the money has to come from you.

People are living in a lopsided bizarro fantasy world, where it’s OK for the head of your company to pull a seven- or eight-figure compensation package, while he (or she, but most likely he) drives the company in the ground, but it’s not OK to tax him (or her, but most likely him).

People throw all these economic indicators around like they mean something… like what the “Dow” is at… or what the GDP of the country is… or what the minimum wage is or should be… Most people pull these statistics out and make comparisons over 30 or 50 year periods, but never adjust for inflation. The dollar is worth less than a sixth of what is was when I was born. If you’re making $6.00 an hour now, that’s the equivalent of making $1.00 an hour in 1968 (average inflation rate of 4.66%). Is no one alarmed by this? How does this come to pass? Well, the fact that the government keeps borrowing money to cover expenses that should be covered by taxes doesn’t help. Our leaders borrow to cover expenses… why is anyone surprised that we’re in a financial meltdown, now? The people are following the example set by the leaders… Apparently, it’s perfectly fine to run a 400 billion dollar deficit on a budget of about 3 trillion dollars. What happens to the deficit? it gets piled onto the national debt, which by some estimates is over 10 trillion dollars.

What’s wrong? A few things… People have no sense of scale for numbers in the millions, billions and trillions. It’s just a bunch of zeros at that point. People in this country don’t take a minute, step back and see the big picture. All they know is their taxes are too high, and somewhere, some liberal is performing an abortion. Wake up, people. Our economy is a sham, and no one really knows how the sham works. The people in charge are very strongly motivated to stay there, and at your expense, and it’s not just the folks in Washington, or city hall or the state capital you have to look out for. It’s the captains of industry, too… because they’re the ones pulling the strings in Washington, city hall and the statehouse. Not you. You just get to pick WHICH slimy politician gets to be stroked by the conniving captains of industry. Once they’re in, and they get their first “gift” or “contribution”, they’re pwned… because… well…. look at what a U.S senator or representative gets for a salary…. about $170,000 a year. All the travel and the houses and so on… that doesn’t come cheap. Nor does getting re-elected. Do you figure that Joe Biden spent more than $170,000 getting re-elected last time? I bet he did. Where does THAT money come from? I don’t mean to pick on Joe alone… all of ‘em. They’re all whores, and we’re not paying them what they think they’re worth… GM is paying them what they think they’re worth. I don’t mean to pick on GM… All of ‘em.

Oh, and a thought about Congressional salaries… here’s how out of touch and uninterested these people are. They manage to keep voting in pay raises for themselves… never fear… they won’t go hungry. Somehow, it’s escaped their notice that the minimum wage in this country is not (or was not until very recently) adjusted for inflation, and had no mechanism in place to do anything about it… Now I don’t know where you can live reasonably on $6.55 an hour, especially considering that jobs paying that low have no health coverage and are tenuous at best.

So this year, on November 4, I have one bit of advice: Throw the bums out. Incumbent = Fired. From the zoning board to US representatives and senators and everyone in between.

What’s the deal with Hotel WiFi?

Tuesday, October 14th, 2008

So I’ve been on the road now for two weeks… stayed in a bunch of hotels.

I’ve found that about 60% of them have either broken, misconfigured or turned-off DHCP. I have been unable to get IP addresses upon connecting to the hotel’s network.

To make matters worse, the people manning the front desk at the hotel have no idea what a DHCP server is, and have no one to call, other than the manager of the hotel, and chances are, the manager has no idea what’s going on either. I was told the problem was with my computer. No.

Wireless is a cheap and easy for hotels to deploy… especially in a pre-existing property… but for a new property, I say put in wired (100Base-T… Cat5e… like that), and if you want, provide wireless as a convenience.

Wi-Fi is OK as a convenience, particularly in a wide-open space, such as a coffee shop or a park, but for a location with lots of obstructions between the user and the access point, Wi-Fi is sketchy, and should not be the primary means of connection.

Nowadays, people are, more and more, depending on hotels to have reliable access to the Internet. What’s more, it’s important to have a means of escalating technical issues to competent personnel, who will be able to take action and correct problems. The “It works for me” answer is insufficient.

Further, if there is any sort of “Windows-only” stuff going on on these networks, that’s just crap. Kinda like “whites-only”… y’know?

For the rest of this trip, I’m going to make a point of testing the Wi-Fi before I register, rather than after.

If you run a hotel property in New Orleans, Orlando or Washington, DC… I’m on my way. Be ready.