Archive: 3 options for Amazon Web Services now available

Posted By on September 17, 2015

I’ve mentioned using Amazon’s AWS storage once orawslogo twice before as a way to store data in the cloud. The more I use and learn about their services, the better I feel moving data into the cloud and archiving with AWS. Next step is to  dig deeper into their cloud based servers for applications, CMS and to replace servers.

We are excited to announce a new, lower-cost Amazon S3 storage class for data that is accessed less frequently. Amazon S3 Standard – Infrequent Access (Standard – IA) offers the high durability, low latency, and high throughput of Amazon S3 Standard, but with prices starting at $0.0125 per GB per month, $0.01 per GB retrieval fee, and a 30-day storage minimum. This combination of low cost and high performance makes Standard – IA ideal for long-term file storage, backups, and disaster recovery.

Additionally, effective September 1, 2015, we are decreasing the price of Amazon Glacier storage by up to 36% for the US East (Northern Virginia), US West (Oregon), and Europe (Ireland) regions. Today’s price drop continues the AWS tradition of reducing our costs and passing the savings along to our customers. This price reduction will take effect automatically and no action is required on your part.

You can now choose between three Amazon S3 storage classes that are designed for 99.999999999% durability: Standard, Standard – IA, and Amazon Glacier. Amazon S3 Standard is secure, highly scalable object storage with very low latency, high throughput, and a Service Level Agreement (SLA) of 99.9% availability, making it suitable for a wide variety of applications and workloads that frequently access data such as business applications, dynamic web sites, content distribution, and big data analytics. For data that is less active, but must be immediately accessible when needed, the new Amazon S3 Standard – IA introduces a reduced per GB storage price, with an availability SLA of 99%. For longer-term archiving where immediate access is not required, Amazon Glacier is the lowest cost Amazon S3 storage option, available for as little as $0.007/GB per month.

Amazon S3 also allows you to define configurable lifecycle policies at the bucket level that will automatically move objects to the preferred storage option. For example, you can store data into the Amazon S3 Standard storage class, move it to Standard – IA 30 days after it has been uploaded, and then to Amazon Glacier 60 days later. These transitions happen without any changes to the application, or to the Amazon S3 bucket where the object is stored.

For more information on today’s announcements, read the AWS blog and visit theAmazon S3 webpage.

Sincerely,
The Amazon Web Services Team

Second GOP debate: Fiorina and Rubio stood out

Posted By on September 17, 2015

Last night’s second GOP debate on CNN at the Reagan Library wasn’t bad as debates go. The current frontrunner, the attention grabbing Donald Trump did one thing for the Republican brand … he got generated attention. His grade school behavior buffoonery brought far viewers to  the stodgy GOP and that alone could help Republicans ideas win back the Whitehouse in 2016. Only time will tell.

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In watching the back and forth, most of the candidates were knowledgeable and left viewers with a sense that they understood the difficulties we face as a country. None have enough time to fully detail their foreign or domestic policies (if they have a polished plan) or do much more than quickly demonstrate knowledge and get in a zinger or joke. All looked far more prepared due to needing to be sharp enough to hold their own in a debate … I’m not so sure for the Democrats?

My winners (1, 2, 3 above) this go around were Carly Fiorina, Marco Rubio and a surprisingly good showing by Chris Christie … although I’m not sure his bigger government is what most conservative Republicans are looking for? I suspect he, along with Bush and Kasich wouldn’t attempt to change Washington DC all that much … just work with both parties and negotiate as in the past (well not the past 6 years!) – if that is what Americans want, then those three are probably mainline picks.

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Donald Trump is the obvious “wild hair (not a reference to his “squirrel”) when it comes to what he would or wouldn’t do in the Whitehouse. Fiorina and Rubio impressed me most with their debate preparation and knowing foreign affairs. Carly Fiorina definitely had passion and was able to verbalize the frustration many have with the direction we are heading. Her “secretary to CEO” experience is exactly what Americans believe is possible when applying intelligence, hard work and good decision-making. Marco Rubio has a lot going for him as well in living the American Dream from a first generation immigrate family. He is young, from a necessary state – Florida and represents Republicans and conservatism well. He life is a bit more “common” than most in that he knows what it is like to work his way up, take out loans for school … and he is young enough as to not have drifted into the political Washington DC insider like most politicians.

All in all, those of us looking for substance were able to come away with a few candidate that intrigued us. I’m more hopeful now that I was a day or a month ago.
Learn a little bit about “a wild hair” from A Way with WordsSmile

A Way With Words — “a wild hair” (MP3) September 22, 2012

Anchor Marker Floats – Currents

Posted By on September 16, 2015

Archiving anchoring advice from a September 9, 2015 article in Bluewater Cruising‘s online Currents web publication.

Anchor Marker Floats by Fran and Jean-Guy Nadeau

Arriving in a crowded anchorage can be a daunting challenge. The degree of apprehension skyrockets while you bumble about trying to find that perfect spot while the skippers of the surrounding boats look on with that disapproving “stay away from my anchor” look. You study all the clues: whether they are using rope or chain rode, the angle of the rode from their bow, the wind direction, current direction, etc. Most often these indicators will give you a good idea but sometimes they can be deceiving. The last thing you want to do is cross another boat’s anchor cable or end up sitting over your neighbor’s anchor, because dollars to doughnuts, he’ll be weighing anchor before you and you’ll be forced to move out of his way. How many of us have settled into our spots, opened the long awaited cool one only to get hailed by your neighbour that he is concerned that you may have fouled his anchor?

A tool rarely seen these days and considered a courtesy by many is a float to mark the position of a vessel’s anchor. I have not always used one but I have seen the advantages of an anchor marker over the past few years, especially in the crowded anchorages of Mexico and Central America. The technique has paid us dividends in crowded anchorages like Playita on the southern side of the Panama Canal and all through the San Blas Islands on the Caribbean side where jockeying for positions with European boats is always an adventure.

Not only does the marker advise other boaters but it can be a real lifesaver when the unexpected happens and you lose your precious anchor or get it snagged and find yourself unable to recover it. That expensive piece of steel and chain is very hard to replace in most of the exotic places we find ourselves. Friends who lost their new Manson anchor in the soft mud of the Barra De Navidad lagoon years ago through a faulty swivel would have benefitted from the line attached to the anchor and used as a tripline. For that matter, yours truly could have retrieved the flukes of our Danforth anchor when they suddenly detached from the shaft in Bahia Ballena, Costa Rica a few years ago but I didn’t think I would need the float there, being the only boat. Bad decision…

An anchor marker is a simple, inexpensive tool. Sure, it can have its moments but I find that I am more comfortable with it than without. While in the Sea of Cortez this past season several boats asked about my setup and our Commodore, Jennifer, asked that I submit an article on my arrangement, so here goes.

My existing float system consists of a 10-inch hard plastic fishing float, 45 feet of ¼ inch line, a stainless shackle on one end of the float, and a 5 lb diving weight (which is really too heavy and will be changed to a 2 lb downrigger weight next season). One end of the line is attached to the anchor on the recovery/tripline eye, the strong eye on the crown that most anchors have so that, if fouled, your anchor can be pulled in the opposite direction of the way it was set. The line is fed through the shackle and the weight is attached to the end. The shackle must be sized so that the weight will not pass through but the line will slide freely. On the upper eye I have rigged a vertical 10-inch stainless wire ring to aid in recovery.

The length of the line is dependent on your boat length. Our boat is 42 feet, with the prop at about 38 feet from the stem, so we use 45 feet of line. The line with float attached will never foul the prop. The weight, on the free end of the line, allows the line to adjust itself for the depth of the anchor, thus, if the anchor is in 30 feet of water, the weight will drag that extra 15 feet down through the shackle so that the slack is not floating on the surface and causing a hazard to passing dinghies or European cruisers. The line should be strong enough to be used as a tripline. Weighted crab trap line should work too. Note: We rarely anchor in depths greater than the length of the line. When we do, I add more line to compensate for the depth at high water.

When deploying the anchor, the cord and float should be allowed to slip freely as the anchor is released. Recovery is done by retrieving the float first using the wire eye or snagging the anchor line with the boathook and then bringing the cord in by hand as the anchor is recovered.

We have used this system a lot in the past years but this past season in the Sea of Cortez I did experience some problems. In a calm anchorage, where the boat is subject to slight current, the boat can float over the ball causing it to slide down the hull or, if drifting broadside, it can be dragged from one side to the other, passing under the keel. The hard plastic knocking against the hull during the night will drive you nuts so I have a rubber inflatable buoy for next season.

Another issue is, in an anchorage where the current causes the boat to drift around the anchor, the pennant will twist around the anchor chain necessitating remedial action and a delay when raising the anchor. Note: We have never had the cord foul the prop even when the boat floated over it.

Don’t forget to mark your float with your boat name and an anchor symbol for the passers-by who think it is a freebie floating by.

Source: Anchor Marker Floats – Currents

Future Olympian, maybe — No pain, no gain. #fail

Posted By on September 15, 2015

Ouch! That’s gotta hurt …

After watching the AppleEvent last week – posting belated

Posted By on September 15, 2015

I snipped a few screen shots while watching the #AppleEvent last week as Tim Cook and team unveiled the new iPhones, iPads and AppleTV. apple_finalAll in all the surprises were “non-surprises” so really there weren’t any shockers … not necessarily a bad thing. The normal expectation in the month of September is either upgraded iPhones (the current “s” trend) or totally new iPhones and the Apple Watch (like last year). The mobile smartphone is the biggest driver to Apple’s profits so any mistake here is a big deal.

Last year’s 6 and 6-plus were big changes since they upped the screen size so as expected, this years’ mobile devices look nearly the same. They did however, just as with the iPhone5 to the 5s, make significant improvements to the processing power and camera. Another interesting twist is bypassing how they sell direct to the customer … now instead of contracting with the carrier, Apple will be offering two year contracts directly. Early pre-orders iPhones6s_2015indicate this might have been a smart move – 9/14 WSJ article. AAPL150914

Apple: Preorders Strong for New iPhones

Apple Inc. said its latest iPhones are on pace to exceed last year’s first-weekend sales of 10 million units, citing exceptionally strong initial orders.

Apple started accepting early orders for the new phones—the iPhone 6S and iPhone 6S Plus—on Saturday. The phones will start shipping on Sept. 25.

MORE

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The iPad also saw the rumored new “Pro” model appear. The much larger iPadPro has a 12.9” screen and higher performance processor capable of splitting the screen with a couple of apps. Great for those of us filling out forms and needing to see content from another page. Productivity is the key as the iPad is inching ever closer to becoming a productive replacement for the notebook or laptop computer. Unfortunately the price point is starting to push the limit for a device still missing a keyboard, SD slot or USB connection. As much as I prefer business calls with an iPad, I do miss the functionality of a “real” computer when traveling.

ApplePencilKeyboard2015Apple did however create a couple very ingenious add-ons for the iPadPro: A pencil (drawing and pointing device) and a physical keyboard with a unique magnetic snap connection to the iPadPro. I have to admit, having a keyboard and pencil might even give the iPadPro a leg up on a computer? Of course Microsoft would say, “we already have a device like that … the Surface 3 and Surface Pro 3.”

MicrosoftSurface3

Somewhat less inspiring to me was the AppleTV update. It is still a “puck” device just like the others on the market. It has been upgraded and improved with games and a touch sensitive remote, but it is still not the “TV” we’re all hoping for … must be a real challenge to simplify that device … but it is sorely needed AND perhaps one of the better reasons to be an Apple shareholder. I can’t imagine what the sales will be IF they re-invent the television set just as they did the cellphone.

AAPL2007-2015
Full YahooFinance AAPL Quote

Brenda continues her recovery and new trees planted

Posted By on September 14, 2015

SwampWhiteOak_1_150912As mentioned previously, we made our annual tree purchase this weekend (Swamp White Oaks), as well as added a couple clearance Hydrangeas. Who knows, we may live long enough to see a few mature hardwood trees in our backyard?

SwampWhiteOak_2_150912

Also, I can report positively on Brenda’s recovery … she is now walking (with cane or holding my hand) and as of this week will begin "active" rehab of her new "bionic" upper arm/shoulder. Currently the shoulder has a "better than expected" passive range of movement, which is very encouraging considering the comments from the surgeon after the operation. Thanks for the continued prayers for a full recovery.

SwampWhiteOak_3_150912 Hydrangea150912

Purchased a couple new Swamp White Oak trees for the yard

Posted By on September 13, 2015

deerrubBack in 2009, I purchase eleven small year-end-clearance trees from my brother’s home nursery – NativeOhioPlants.com. We had mixed success in that our deer population enjoys both eating the new growth and “deer rubbing” the branches and bark. Unfortunately it killed or mangled more than half the trees that we planted.

Since it is autumn (or almost) again, we’ve been hunting for bargains at out local nurseries to replace a couple of the trees … Brenda also found a few new plants for her landscape mounds (work ahead for me). I am excited to plant two new 9 foot Swamp White Oaks ($50/tree)  in the backyard and hopeful that the new hydrangeas will grow in an area where there are leftover tree roots boogering up the soil?

Swamp white oak is a striking tree with attractive peeling bark, especially on young trees. The lustrous, lobed leaves have a two-tone appearance, dark green on top with a silvery-white underside. Fall color is an orangeish-gold to yellow in mid-autumn. An excellent shade tree for any landscape.

Botanical name:  Quercus bicolor

All Common Names:  swamp white oak

OAK_SWAMP_WHITE2_leaves

Donna Lange Keepin’ On sailing south near west African coast

Posted By on September 12, 2015

DonnaLangeInspiredInsanity

A few years back I was somewhat attentive to following a sailing friend, Donna Lange, complete her solo sail around the world. I’ve been less tuned in on her “Sail Twice Around” voyage due to being more focused sailtwicearoundmap150912on my wife’s injury and father’s passing. It is time to catch up a little bit.

Donna aboard her rebuilt Southern Cross 28 (same boat she previously circumnavigated with) left Rhode Island in July 2015 heading directly east via the tradewind route down along the coast of Africa. Her path will tentatively take her around Cape Hope and across the Southern Ocean in the “roaring forties” until she is south of Tazmania. She plans to sail south of New Zealand and back to about 45S only dropping down to round Cape Horn at the tip of South America. If all goes well, her return sail from the south Atlantic should bring her up east coast of South America rounding Brazil and into the Caribbean with a planned return to Bristol, Rhode Island in April or May of 2016. A month and a half in, she is progressing steadily and in good spirits according to her SailBlog Log and finally got rain
Continued fair winds and favorable seas … Keepin’ On.” Smile

This farmer had a great way to commemorate Patriot Day

Posted By on September 11, 2015

Fourteen years after Islamic extremists affiliated with Osama bin Laden and the Al-Qaeda terrorist organization attacked the United States with commercial airliners on 9/11/2001, we solemnly remember the 2977 who were killed with a national day of prayer and remembrance. A bill to make September 11th a national day of mourning was passed into law and designated as Patriot Day. The first Patriot Day was 9/11/2002 and it has been a day of half-staff flags, moving moments of silence and memorial ceremonies ever since.

ChrisKyle_AmericanSniper_CornMaze

This year I noticed an impressive corn maze into the countryside by a farmer celebrating the heroism and American resolve by one of our country’s patriots – Chris Kyle. It is a deserving memorial and another way for Americans around this country to honor those who have fought and those who continue to fight for our country. True patriots … all of them.

Scanned a couple favorite old photos from a frame for #TBT

Posted By on September 10, 2015

IMG_5747When my daughter Katelyn was home a few weeks ago, she wanted Brenda to try painting a few things with Annie Sloan Chalk Paint. It happens to be a fairly popular crafty decorating “thing” and a creative way to reuse old furniture. This started the process of looking for items around our house to paint. First Brenda stared with a framed mirror (still in progress) and then she began looking for smaller items like picture frames and pots. I pulled photos out a an old frame in my office and figured it would be a good time to scan and archive a couple photos. My favorite is a photo of Katelyn, Taylor and Brenda (below) from quite a few years ago … #TBT.

Behind that photo was an old photo of Brenda’s dad as an Air Force Lieutenant in World War II (1943, I think). What a great photo – one that I forgot it was in the frame.

KatelynBrendaTaylor2000maybLtFrederickHoward1943

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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