Testing MarsEdit 5 for MacOS with a 1980s Apple Logo Sheet

Posted By on March 8, 2023

After a bit of time away from my aging Apple iMac and time to ponder using the MarsEdit blogging app from RedSweater as a replacement for OpenLiveWriter on Windows, I bit the bullet and purchased the software. The final push to purchase was the responsive emails from the developer Daniel Jalkut and how to set up a few “custom macros” to better fit my needs. MarsEdit5The great part is that he is continuing to improve and add to the app and has been doing it a long, long, time. 

I’m not sure if Daniel has been programming Apple MaciOS software as long as I’ve been using Macs (an original logo sticker sheet from one of my first Macs above) … but long enough to give me confidence to start using Marsedit 5

Archive: The Cornhole woodworking project was a success

Posted By on March 7, 2023

Ellerie, Katelyn and Annalyn Playing Cornhole

For years now, I’ve been planning to make a set of Cornhole boards for the backyard when entertaining in the summertime, but never really wanted to just slap together construction grade 2 x 4s and plywood. So when thinking about a project gift for my granddaughters 3rd and 6th birthdays this year, who are now old enough to play yard games, I decided to improve the woodworking a Ohio Map Scarlet and Graylittle bit.

Initially I was going to paint them in OSU “scarlett and gray” colors … but really wanted to use better quality wood and joinery techniques. So instead of paint, I opted for a preprinted logo and clear lacquer and sanding … and more lacquer and sanding, etc. You get the picture … a full quart of lacquer and I lost track of the number of coats until it was gone. HA! 

The other thing I wanted to stay away from was the use of fasteners … although did use a few stainless steel pin nails when seating the top into the rabbet joint since I wasn’t confident in having enough clamps or even pressure (in hindsight I probably could have used weights?) For the corner joints I also used a single brass screw mostly for alignment, but made a jig to cut the walnut miter shims which turned out nice. This addition is definitely a favorite of mine when making frames, etc. 

Cornhole board rearCornhole boards

Cornhole Boards in Workshop

Music Monday: Semi-Forgotten Mary MacGregor 1976 song

Posted By on March 6, 2023

This content is restricted.

Combined Birthday celebration for our granddaughters

Posted By on March 5, 2023

This content is restricted.

An accident that goes beyond the ordinary in Baltimore, MD

Posted By on March 5, 2023

It is one thing trying to evade the police by speeding, then running a red light and crashing into an unsuspecting driver … but to also hit a building and have it collapse is another? Yikes!

A new area code is coming to Southwestern Ohio: 283

Posted By on March 4, 2023

New Area Code For SW Ohio - 283With area code 513 phone numbers in shortened supply in our Southwest Ohio area, “the Public Service Commission of Ohio has approved an all-services area code overlay for the 513 area code, which serves southwest Ohio including the communities of Cincinnati, Cleves, Forest Park, Hamilton, Lebanon, Maineville, Mason, Miamitown, Middletown, Norwood, Oxford, Trenton and West Chester. The new 283 area code will serve the same geographic area currently served by the existing 513 area code.”

So if you live in and around the Cincinnati, Ohio area, be aware of of caller IDs with 283 being “from the Southwestern Ohio area.” 

Friday Filler: Sharks in a tank and being manipulated by fear

Posted By on March 3, 2023

FearStrikes Snipped a couple of social media shared images this past week that may not be completely truthful … but they do trigger thinking about one’s “personal growth” and how easily we are manipulated by “fear.” 

SharkInTank

So .. open your mind, be thoughtful and willing to entertain different views with polite debate and discussion. Most of us will “grow.” When it comes to being manipulated by those peddling “fear” … people wanting to control others, the politically biased or headlline driven media or power-hungry agencies in our government … be on your guard. 

Tighter money and a slowing economy impacts company earnings

Posted By on March 2, 2023

A chip company I’ve watched and traded up and down over the last few years has been Marvell Technology Group ($MRVL) and achieving consistency quarter to quarter and year to year is a challenge. With the economies around the world stressed with higher inflation and the tightening from central banks, meeting earnings estimates is becoming the norm. After hours postmarket trading indicates how investors reacted.

Marvell Technology Group (NASDAQ:MRVL) reported quarterly earnings of $0.46 per share which missed the analyst consensus estimate of $0.47 by 2.13 percent. This is a 8 percent decrease over earnings of $0.50 per share from the same period last year. The company reported quarterly sales of $1.42 billion which beat the analyst consensus estimate of $1.40 billion by 1.36 percent. This is a 5.66 percent increase over sales of $1.34 billion the same period last year.

Student loan forgiveness, the Supreme Court and an old post

Posted By on March 1, 2023

With student loan forgiveness in the news again as the U.S. Supreme Court looks at the Constitutionality of  President Biden’s authority with a stroke of  his pen to be able to forgive student loans. Common sense would question the question of this extraordinary power, but past presidents have paused payments due to emergencies … so who knows when contracts can be completely changed? It doesn’t seem proper that those borrowing for college could benefit at the expense of other taxpayers who may not have had those same opportunities.

It reminded me of my own situation and paying off student loans over 10 years and how that prioritized Brenda and my goal of paying for Katelyn and Taylor’s undergraduate degrees. So thankful we could plan for and afford to live comfortably and help our children get an education and good start in life.

AFSA Student Loan Paid Off Letter

Audiobook – Inflated: How Money and Debt Built the American Dream by R. Christopher Whalen (published 2010)

Posted By on February 28, 2023

Inflated_RChristopherWhalenThis past month on our trip to Florida, I downloaded an audiobook on Hoopla from the library in order to save on iPhone data (our Mint Mobile plan has a 4GB limit). I started it on my AfterShokz headset while on the beach, but Brenda soon wanted to listen with me … so we both enjoyed a few hours DaytimeQuarterMoonDelrayBeach_Feb2023of "mostly" history regarding our habit as Americans to live a lifestyle  "well-beyond our personal income and our country’s budget." In other words, debt and money-printing is not a recent problem, but definitely a growing one (we needed 3 more hours of beach time listening and staring at the daytime quarter moon! [above])

The book written by R. Christopher Whalen called "Inflated: How Money and Debt Built the American Dream" does an impressive job of covering America’s history and spending as it relates to the politics that have "controlled banking, currency, monetary gold, and government debt since our country’s founding."

From the Inside Flap

When it comes to matters of money, most Americans tend to view themselves as reasonably prudent people, reflecting the puritan roots of their European ancestors. Yet, at the same time, Americans also seem to feel entitled to a lifestyle, individually and nationally, that is well above the rest of the world’s, and well beyond our current means. Inflated: How Money and Debt Built the American Dream explores more than two hundred years of American politics and monetary policy to examine this conflict. In doing so, it asks whether the current understanding of the American Dream, one of entitlement, is so ingrained that to expect Americans willingly to live in a "deflated" world is unrealistic. This book simply and directly tells the story of inflation and public debt as enduring, and perhaps even endearing, features of American life. It describes:

  • The Gold Rush and how dreams of instant wealth replaced the notions of hard work and saving as the national ideal
  • How Congress’s deficit spending is a direct legacy of Abraham Lincoln’s presiding over the first legal tender laws, which gave the federal government control overthe issuance of "money"
  • How the financial crisis of 1893 led to the creation of the Federal Reserve System, ultimately confirming the cautionary views of Thomas Jefferson and Andrew Jackson that a central bank would prove antithetical to democracy and individual rights
  • The rise of investment trusts during the 1890s, and how those trusts were the precursors of hedge funds and complex financial derivatives
  • How the dollar’s role as the world’s currency after WWII encouraged America’s tendency to demand immediate gratification of national wants and needs
  • Why the Gold Standard Act of 1900 was the high watermark for sound money in the United States, and why Richard Nixon’s decision to end the dollar’s gold convertibility in 1971 opened the door to vast inflation and debt in the decades that followed

Whether taming the frontier in the 1800s, fighting poverty during the Great Depression, or bailing out private corporations deemed "too big to fail" in the twenty-first century, America’s tendency to borrow from the future is a core ethic of American society. In the post―market meltdown economy, Inflated explores the rich history of living beyond one’s means, and whether Americans―an instinctively self-reliant, isolationist people―are more likely either to embrace fiscal stringency if other nations demand it or turn their backs on the rest of the world.

Desultory - des-uhl-tawr-ee, -tohr-ee

  1. lacking in consistency, constancy, or visible order, disconnected; fitful: desultory conversation.
  2. digressing from or unconnected with the main subject; random: a desultory remark.
My Desultory Blog