What to do with an old Amazon Echo Dot? Tear it down.

Posted By on December 16, 2022

alexadot_aniWhat “should” a person do when an older piece of tech stops working?

Give up? Buy new?

Well we have an older first generation Amazon Echo Dot continued to be unreliable in maintaining a WiFi connection to our mesh home network. After several restarts over the last couple of months, full reboots and re-setups, I’ve given up. Partially because voice assistants have improved and are all that not that expensive anymore (Amazon, Apple and Google all want customers married into their ecosystems). In our case, I had a spare unused Echo Dot that replaced the one in the iAV2B alarm clock and so curiosity got the best of me and I wanted to see what exactly was inside.

Archive: Old photos found from my ONU college days #TBT

Posted By on December 15, 2022

1974_Capri_1980

1974Capri_dallas_gFirst up, is a rainy photo of the second car that I rebuilt … but this 1974 Capri was really my first car since I bought it with my own money (paid $600 at a junkyard in 1978). The car I think of as my first car would be a 1967 Ford Custom 500 (link to when it was newer and towing a trailer) was really my mom’s car that I learned to drive on. It eventually required rust repair, repainting and the engine rebuilt when I was in high school (great lessons with some extra help from my dad and neighbor). The Capri required a bit more (cough, cough)  body work since Dallas and I replaced a front quarter clip (photo left).

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The other couple of photos: 1) Was sailing (racing Thistles) on Kiser Lake just east of Sidney, Ohio and 2) my long time college buddy and good friend to this day Jeff Pitts when he was volunteering as an EMT in Ada, Ohio (looking out of our 2nd floor Founder’s Hall dorm window).

Great memories and am glad to be able to archive these photos before they are gone!

Archive: Merry Christmas 2022 and have a Happy New Year

Posted By on December 14, 2022

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As is my December tradition, I’m including a digital copy of what once was our Corbett Christmas Letter but is now a just a “card” on my blog. CorbettOostraCanmoreAL_July2022Our year as a family was full of too many great times to include, but highlighted by a special event: a 40th Anniversary and trip planned by our family to the Canadian Rockies (part 1 and part 2). Our year was also intermixed with family gatherings for holidays and birthdays, babysitting in Perrysburg and several trips to Florida. Our grown children had a few house-highlights of their own, as Katelyn and Drew started their homebuilding project and Taylor bought a nicely remodeled condominium in Walnut Hills/Cincinnati.

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Like the short, but sweet (Idiom) update on the card, I’ll close with Merry Christmas wishes to all who read my blog and for peace, hope, joy and love as we welcome in a new year.

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Happy Birthday Drew and creative names for snowplows

Posted By on December 13, 2022

My daughter is great at sending links to items she thinks would be great for the blog. The other day Katelyn sent an “Ohio Turnpike Name-A-Snowplow Contest” story that OrangeSnowPlowArthad some pretty creative names — well actually, like her mom, she had her husband send it 😀 (BTW, Happy Birthday Drew!). 

Here are the winners:

  • Ctrl-Salt-Delete, Nicole G.
  • Blizzard Wizard, Jacqueline F.
  • Plow Chicka Plow Wow, Joshua K.
  • You’re Killin’ Me Squalls, Linda V.
  • The Big LePlowski, Matthew S.
  • The Blizzard of Oz, Annette B.
  • Ohio Thaw Enforcement, Jonathan H.
  • Clearopathtra, Samantha S.

LINK to full story

Music Monday: Remembering Fleetwood Mac’s Christine McVie

Posted By on December 12, 2022

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Archive: Christmas trees, homebuilding and Ellerie’s big bed

Posted By on December 11, 2022

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Homemade Croutons: My mother would have smiled

Posted By on December 10, 2022

With inflation pushing grocery prices up, Brenda refuses to purchase store-bought croutons unless they are “on sale.” So since we had a quarter loaf of stale bread after our recent week away, I decided to cube and turn it into Rosemary, Italian seasoning, Garlic and Olive Oil croutons.

After making them (bake 10 minutes at 400 degrees),  I contemplated how my mother would have been proud to know we were not wasting stale bread. She always had old bread drying in the cupboard and would almost always make her own croutons … or assign me when I was a kid at home the duty of grinding the bread into crumb to be used on our fresh or freezer full of Lake Erie Yellow Perch. I can remember helping my Grandfather Bluhm, Uncle Bob and DadC cleaning wheelbarrows full of fish after successful weekends of fishing. What a life we lived in able to roll our boat down the beach and catch fish in the summer … or go out on the ice and icefish in the winter. A great childhood and great  memories.

Tech Friday: Moved my blog to an AMD Premium server while updating the OS to Ubuntu 22.04.1

Posted By on December 9, 2022

About this time of year the handful of servers that I maintain need to be looked at a little closer. Often I’m only doing the minimum maintenance, updates and backups … because there are often problems after an update. Pointing being, maintenance on this server have been getting over looked and put on the back burner.

So MyDesultoryBlog.com is getting some new hardware and a spiffy Linux “Jammy Jellyfish” update. After a few tense hours yesterday, I “think” it is updated and running smoothly?

For one reason or another, this year I decided to go all out (cough, cough) by spending an extra $12 and have updated the relatively low-priced hardware, as well as the Linux version (now Ubuntu 22.04.1). Instead of a teeny, tiny ,wimpy server, I’ve upgraded to a 64-bit AMD “Premium” … which mean it is now just a “tiny, wimpy” server.

It will be interesting if I notice any improvements? I’m dubious … as I still plan to move things to a Raspberry Pi someday.

How many flat tires does a person repair in a lifetime? #TBT

Posted By on December 8, 2022

The Throwback Thursday #TBT tag was just an excuse to ask the question: “How many flat tires does a person need to have repaired in their lifetime?” AcuraRDX_Flat221204I don’t know the answer, but I do know that I’ve repaired A LOT.

It seems I’m forever needing to add air (change in temperatures), have a slow leak or pick up a nail … or thorn when it comes to lawn equipment tires.

Last week Brenda’s 2010 Acura RDX once again indicated a low tire. Since it was “that time of year” when the temperatures drop, I didn’t immediately address the problem and assumed the drop in temps triggered the sensor. BUT when I walked out to the garage over the weekend, bingo … indeed it was something else as her car had a flat tire.

AcuraRDXNail221204AcuraRDX_NailClose221204

While going through the motions of removing the nail and plugging the tire, I started to wonder about people who are a bit less mechanically inclined and don’t have the ability or interest to take care of these kinds of problems themselves? I suppose they spend their day getting a tow and taking their cars to their neighborhood repair garage, tire shop or car dealer? Also, “necessity is the mother of invention” as there is help on the Internet or YouTube, so they may eventually learn how to tackle these kinds of repetitive repairs. If you didn’t have a father, mother or neighbor to teach and it was not taught in school years ago, I’m not sure how you learned it? Then there is the big question of having the right tools, etc. All I know is that I’m glad to at least be able to handle these things at home and in my garage. Yes, I’m currently thinking my son Taylor. (urban living). 😉

Remembering the attack on Pearl Harbor 81 years ago

Posted By on December 7, 2022

It feels uncomfortably routine, to nonchalantly include a remembrance post on December 7th each year … but it is important to reflect on the evil of man and human devastation associated with war.  In remembering the loss of American lives inflicted by the Japanese in their “unprovoked and dastardly” attack of Pearl Harbor, I’ll include a very brief history and timeline below.

Click for full size version of this photo

In remembering 2400 Americans who lost their lives that day in 1941, it is important to follow the events that lead to Japan deciding to go to war with … as Isoroku Yamamoto put it … “a sleeping giant.”   The timeline preceding attacking the U.S. may have a bit to do with Japan being closed society for so many centuries or just the ambitions of egotistical and power hungry humans. Take a look at history. Japan’s lack of resources required that they colonize to support their growth and technological advancement  … and perhaps in their eyes of their leaders … to protect their growing population.

By the end of the 1930s, Japanese ambition was clear … and with the western world focused on Germany , the Nazis and Hitler … European colonial powers were clearly preoccupied with what would be another World War. By 1940, the U.S. made an attempt to thwart Japanese expansion by imposing trade sanctions and then an oil embargo on oil in order to stop their military expansion in Asia (Japan had invaded North China in 1937). By 1941, Japanese officers started discussing a possible attack on Pearl Harbor.

Timeline in for the year of 1941 (FoxLA.com):

Nov. 16: Japanese submarines depart for Pearl Harbor in preparation of a possible attack.

Nov. 26: A final attempt at diplomacy on the part of the Japanese is rejected by President Franklin D. Roosevelt. Japanese aircraft carriers and escorts depart for Pearl Harbor in response.

Nov. 27: President Franklin D. Roosevelt issues a war warning for the Pacific, which is largely ignored in Hawaii.

Dec. 6: U.S. intelligence decodes a crucial message pointing to the next morning as a deadline for an undetermined Japanese action. The message is delivered to Washington’s high command more than four hours ahead of the attack on Pearl Harbor, but the message is not forwarded to U.S. commanders in Honolulu.

Dec. 7, 7:02 a.m. local time: Two U.S. radar operators identify large groups of aircraft in flight toward the island of Oahu from the north. Because they were expecting a flight of B-17s from the U.S. at any moment, they do not sound an alarm.

Dec. 7, 7:55 a.m. local time: A swarm of Japanese warplanes descends on Honolulu, attacking ships in Pearl Harbor, as well as air stations at Hickam, Wheeler, Ford Island, Kaneohe and Ewa Field. The attack lasts for two hours and 20 minutes.
When the attack is finally over, 18 ships and more than 300 aircraft have been destroyed or damaged. More than 2,400 Americans were killed, and an additional 1,200 wounded.

Dec. 8: President Roosevelt addresses Congress, and his address is broadcast via radio to the American public. Roosevelt asks Congress for a declaration of war against Japan, which Congress approves.

 

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.
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