Sticking with what I know: Bought my 4th pair of Vasque boots

Posted By on March 24, 2021

The more I think about it, the “lamer” it appears to be talking about shoes … but truth be told, the Sperry Topsider reviews and shoe insole posts still are in the top ten when it comes to blog numbers.

I’m posting a photo of my newly arrived clearance priced Vasque hiking boots and previous ones … as this will be my 4th pair of Vasque boots. The first pair were light-duty summer weight and lasted quite a few years of hiking with my buddy Jeffuntil I started using them for work boots. OldNewVasqueHikingBoots2103I upgraded to a full leather pair which seemed to take forever to break in, but held up for years until the rubber sole split loose from the leather (poor design since they could not be re-stitched like older full leather hiking boots).

The 3rd pair (current) were end of the season clearance boots and have held up well (photo), but definitely have not been used for hiking like the other two. They are probably still my favorites even though they are insulated (but I still wear all year around). Unfortunately they are starting to crack a bit and suspect they need to be replace before doing an hiking.

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Weddings and Nice Weather indicates Spring 2021 has arrived

Posted By on March 23, 2021

LilacBudsOut210321Besides what has become an annual photo of one of our lilac bushes pushing out buds, this past weekend was the first weekend of spring. Besides the new growth and greening lawn, we celebrated with our neighbors of 25 years, Pam and Jim by attending  their son’s wedding in Cincinnati. It was a beautiful wedding for a beautiful couple. Congratulations Andrea and Jared Miller.  

BrendaRichWeddingJaredAndreaWedding210320

The great part for us was that the wedding was in East Walnut Hills at St. Francis de Sales Parish with 2+ hours between the service and reception dinner which gave us the afternoon to “walk” over to Taylor’s apartment and visit with him. Megan has given his apartment a female touch, although Taylor is just fine when it comes to caring for and decorating his place .. it has been a few years since college (wink, wink). It was great to spend the afternoon before driving down the the Bell Center for the reception and evening. We had a great time.

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Music Monday: More Than a Feeling – Boston 1976

Posted By on March 22, 2021

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Ancestry and two cute St. Patrick’s Day granddaughter photos

Posted By on March 21, 2021

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At what point do or can you start cutting ties with BigTech?

Posted By on March 20, 2021

A technology friend of mine, Scott Bilik (who was considered my Twitter “Godfather in 2007), has recently wiped some of the mud from his hypothetical digital footprints and is systematically freeing himself from Big Tech’s shacklesProductNotCustomer. This current Silicon Valley monopoly has increased its political clout and has enticed or entrapped most of us in ways that it is difficult to sever. We’ve voluntarily given up privacy and personal liberty to use seemingly free or relatively low cost services in our modern connected lifestyle … and if we disagree with their edicts (or “wokism“), then are censored or banned.

My buddy Jeff (a Cybersecurity guy) has slowly been doing the same after cutting cords and his social media ties a few years ago. I’ve given thought to doing the same … but continue dabble with services offered by Google, Twitter, Facebook and to a somewhat lesser extent Apple, Amazon and Microsoft. I occasionally remind myself that I am behaving like the complaint German citizen who kept quiet, operated within the rules and allowed a National Socialism ideology to spread pre-World War II. They controlled the propaganda, schools and by threat and force by eliminating contrary opinions and people who opposed Nazism.

In today’s leftist totalitarian movement (see recent post), those wielding power have been pushing their ideology in our public education system, the media and used their control of technology as a way to silence and censor opposing and unwanted opinion. They restrict stories and promote those which they agree. They promote candidates and political views, while squelching those to which they disagree. All of us who use connected technology, if open-minded, can see this authoritarian behavior and know instinctively what happens if you say the wrong thing or step out of line … especially if it counters today’s “woke” leftist’s views. Many who remain compliant and quiet, do it because they agree with the leftist ideology … or out of the threat of being “cancelled.” There are plenty of examples of those being censored. Few want to be targeted by the left or want to live without the technology controlled by the Big Tech overlords (and their “chosen” political leaders).

Scott’s personal reasonings was excellent and well worth reading (here’s a link to his blog and a March 8th snippet):

Cultural Shifts at Big Tech

At times I’m glad I work in silicon design. I have memories of big tech companies that primarily focused on building cool, innovative products and services. They rarely touched upon matters of politics or culture.

These past several years I’ve noticed more that these companies – which started out rather open – are making ever more stringent rules on what is allowable content. For many sites I can’t get over the flip in what content is allowed and what is quarantined or banned. “Move your life To The Cloud,” they said. They then proceeded to lock down allowable content further and further each year. When I was a teen I’d see bumper stickers that would say “Question Authority”. Online that is becoming increasingly difficult.

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Tech Friday: Apple expected to launch new iPad Pro in April 2021

Posted By on March 19, 2021

Although I’m not in the market for a new iPad just yet, I am (or was) a multiple hours a day user back when traveling a bit more and interested in what a Thunderbolt and M1 chipped iPad Pro might offer. At least that’s the rumor for the April 2021 launch … but who knows if it will be worth the premium price?

iPadProTomGuidePhoto_s

The Apple Silicon M1 chip is the most interesting improvement for me as it should offer speed and processing power rivaling the MacBook Air M1, but still be in the handy tablet format and running iPad OS (???) … at least until the computer and mobile operating systems come together. According to several reports I’ve been reading, the addition of a Thunderbolt port will give the iPad Pro access to peripherals such as external monitors and hard drives … something we have all wanted for a long time. Of course most of my tablet file sizes are smallish nowadays and with faster wireless speeds and cloud services … this wired connection may not prove all that necessary?

Again, I’m happy with my current iPad and Brydge keyboard setup, but as my aging Lenovo Yoga 710 notebook computer isn’t used as much, having a single travel device “again” would be appealing … but suspect a new iPhone to replace my 7 plus might be a priority?

Do you build or buy a new house this year or put it off?

Posted By on March 18, 2021

Real estate has been on a tear in many markets as the coronavirus has people moving from cities to the suburbs and their own piece of land. In my opinion it is not just COVID19 related, but that fact that wsjlumbercoppercrudecities aren’t as secure or as tax friendly to live in, especially on the east and west coasts.

Since I have adult children in exactly the same shoes Brenda and I were decades ago, I also understand the remodeling, house hunting and desire to build your own home. As I recall, it was both a stressful and expensive endeavor when we moved from Hudson to Cincinnati … but paid off over time (something real estate and homes have done in previous generations). As my father-in-law would say about buying more land as he added to his property over the years in western NY, “they’re not making land anymore.”

Smiles and good memories aside, the cost of building (and homes) has definitely risen this past year and with stimulus dollars, the economy recovering and the cheap money in the form of low mortgage interest rates continuing, it will probably continue boost for real estate until the next crisis hits.

Commodities Boom Hits Home

Rock-bottom mortgage rates have made owning a house more affordable, while the Fed’s purchasing of mortgage-backed securities has spurred lending. Lower household spending during the lockdown and federal stimulus checks have helped people accumulate down payments. House hunters are bidding up properties alongside legions of investors who are buying and building a growing share of America’s houses and renting them out.

The competition for houses has lifted home prices in almost every part of the country …

HomeBuildingLumberTruckWSJ

Lumber and other wood products took off last summer and have remained aloft. Futures for delivery this month ran up to $1,040 per thousand board feet, nearly triple the typical price this time of year. The story is similar for oriented strand board, used for walls, floors and roofs. Many engineered wood products are in short supply and hard to find.

The National Association of Home Builders says that rising lumber prices have added $24,000 to the cost of building the average single-family home … MORE

Polished up our simple folding IKEA dish drying rack

Posted By on March 17, 2021

DeRustedPolishedSSDishRackAt one time, I thought I was better at time management, but clearly after spending over an hour disassembling, de-rusting and polishing a folding IKEA stainless steel rack, I am not. In retrospect, buying a new one would have been a better way to use my time … but I found out they don’t carry this particular version (since it rusts, I know why). Still, it would have been nice to replace it with one mounted to the side wall like the Kungsfors and open up counterspace below it.

IKEA_kungsfors-dish-drainer

EDIT: After a trip to IKEA .. Brenda vetoed the idea. It wasn’t all that attractive or appropriate for the kitchen anyway.

A softening in attitude towards socialism for America

Posted By on March 16, 2021

Support for socialism has been on the rise in America as I have previously noted and according to trend we have seen and the acceptable rhetoric/terms politicians have been willing to adopt this past decade. Liberals, who now prefer the “progressive” label, have decidedly shifted from resisting the status quo, traditional “right and wrong” norms, free markets, free trade, individual rights and freedom associated with the previous generations in America, to now becoming “woke” authoritarians demanding and now dictating their views on others.

liberalismdefined

These mostly younger Democrats are more receptive to government controlling what we do, say, think and who decides what is acceptable moment to moment. One by one, Constitutionally protected rights are being challenged … and this “we know better” socialist agenda is threatening our democracy from inside. For the most part, leftists control the education system (the radical 1960’s movement Bill Ayers plan) and now seem to have majority control in the  Federal government. This has enable even more nanny state policies and is growing a larger dependent class (the “here’s another check” and vote for us to keep UBI checks coming.).

According to Hillsdale College letter, a 2019 survey found that almost half of young people in American would “prefer living in a socialist country.” In another recent survey 56% of voters between the ages of 18 and 24, and 48% of voters between 25 and 34, favored a “mostly socialist” economic model for the United States.

While debating left-leaning friends, they point out that America has voted and accepted that government is responsible for taking care of citizens … both in 2020 and in the past for decades. We provide Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, EBT cards, set minimum wages and have established variety of welfare programs to assist both individuals and corporations (some as bailouts and others as incentives for desired behaviors). While I can’t argue with what to my eyes is bigger government and central planning dictating and controlling industries and businesses … they up to this point are still mostly privately owned and competing in semi-free markets … at least compared to a communist or socialist nation. It is also true, citizens and charities are no longer the backstop when it comes to caring for the hungry, handicapped and less fortunate … which is debatable issue from the Libertarian side. Small government conservatives and moderate Republicans have pretty much accepted our government has taken over that role … but aren’t willing to relinquish any further free-market intrusion. We have accepted that our predecessors chose to federalize (socialize) a variety of services, but that comes at a cost and loss of efficiency. You’d be hard pressed to find much that our government does more efficiently that competitive private businesses.

… capitalism is the best thing that has ever happened to the material condition of the human race. From the dawn of history until the 18th century, every society in the world was impoverished, with only the thinnest film of wealth on top. Then came capitalism and the Industrial Revolution.  Everywhere that capitalism subsequently took hold, national wealth began to increase and poverty began to fall. Everywhere that capitalism didn’t take hold, people remained impoverished. Everywhere that capitalism has been rejected since then, poverty has increased. LINK

The concern for me is that we are now politically closer than we have ever been to adding more to the list of government run programs, businesses and industry. Obviously health care is at the top of the list for Democrats who are receptive to the idea of more control and more power. It is the easy target since cost of insurance and care has sky rocketed … mostly due to government regulation. That debate aside, as the socialist movement grows, we’re likely to see their ambitions expand … ignoring that the history of socialism and communism has never proven beneficial or prosperous for everyday people or the overall society.

Our freedom and democracy cost our forefathers dearly … let’s not give it up because we’re too indolent to keep it.

Music Monday: North of the U.S. border with The Guess Who

Posted By on March 15, 2021

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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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