Hurricane Isaac comes ashore with plenty of rain

Posted By on August 29, 2012

isaaccomesashore120829Hurricane Isaac s-l-o-w-l-y made its way ashore in Louisiana last night bringing 80mph winds and torrential rains. The category 1 storm may not have packed the punch associated with tight eye-walled hurricanes, but because it is moving at only 8mph, it dumps rain for a much longer period of time.

Early reports are that a parish levy has been topped outside of the city, but that the new and improved 14 billion dollar levies are holding as engineered. About 75% of New Orleans residents are without power and there is some minor street flooding, according to emergency officials.

Isaac’s center is expected to move over Louisiana on Wednesday and Thursday and should cross into southern Arkansas by early Friday.

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Hurricane Katrina and Isaac are eerily similar

Posted By on August 28, 2012

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In checking on TS Hurricane Isaac’s progress over lunch it was clear to see that those living in low lying areas on either side of the Mississippi River better be prepared for some nasty weather — currently the biggest threat appears to be rain. It is kind of eerie to see satellite images of Hurricane Katrina from August 28, 2005 and Isaac on August 28, 2012 side by side ( 8/28/2005 blog post)— see WSJ interactive.


Testing a small video clip above using the an iPad and a Kodak Zx5 pocket cam! 🙂

Why doesn’t this vinyl music thingy fit into my CD player?

Posted By on August 28, 2012

Facebook comes through again and offered a connection to the past (1, 2, 3).

Recently I received an invite indicating my “XX” year Sidney High School reunion was being planned (35th if you must know). A Facebook URL was given so I dutifully plugged in my lightly used FB account and ended up adding a few friends robpottorf_composing… friends, I might add, that are actually my age. It was interesting seeing the names and trying to remember faces  … oh how we have changed. A few of the standout names had me wondering what became of them. Sadly, I’ve since heard a couple have passed away, but others are scattered around the country.

One of them, a stand-out named Rob Pottorf, commented on one of my posts or photos and so figured I should say hello. Rob was easy to remember since he was involved with many high school activities; he was a talented musician, as well as being one of the few who was friendly to everybody no matter the clique. After high school, I do remember hearing that he was working in entertainment at Kings Island near Cincinnati, but I didn’t pay much attention to his career after that. His recent comment had me sleuthing his music Facebook page and I found that his current project is composing the music score for the movie Broken  – pretty cool.

That started me wondering, “do I still have a copy of his high school single” – still in record form for those younger than me. That would be a piece of vinyl that is played with a needle known as a “45” – yes, pre-digital.
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Yup I did still have it … unfortunately can’t play it. Maybe there is a digital version of side 1 (Flight) and side 2 (Beautiful Day) out there somewhere? … hmm, so old that it’s probably in the public domain – ouch!

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Feeling nostalgic for the second time in a day

Posted By on August 27, 2012

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I felt a bit behind the times today searching for some old files in OS9 … then realized just how far ahead of the times the Apple Macintosh computers were as I edited an image on Photoshop 5.5; it still ran flawlessly and with surprising speed.


The first nostalgic moment mentioned above had to do with reconnecting with a high school friend on Facebook … hmm, tomorrow’s post??
 

Posted via email from RichC’s posterous

Sailing and watching tropical storm/hurricane Isaac

Posted By on August 27, 2012

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I spent part of Sunday afternoon checking on tropical storm Isaac and watching some sailing (America’s Cup Preliminary races in San Francisco Bay). The sailing racing associated with America’s Cup has certainly changed in recent years and I’m not sure I’m happy with giving up the 12-meter monohulls this past decade?

As for Isaac, the storm ran over the Florida Keys after a deadly pass over Haiti and Cuba. It hit as a tropical storm with strong winds and heavy rain, but not the hurricane damaging winds associated with an elevated higher category storm. Unfortunately after the last bit of island land, Isaac is predicted to build as it makes a northwest trek towards the gulf coast of Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama. Hold onto your hats!

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And since the radar images indicate that this storm is very wide, I checked a couple images from the marina and inlet where we keep our boat.

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Harbortown Marina-cam and the breakwall at Ft. Pierce Inlet on Sunday afternoon.

Obituary: We lost one of our best in Neil Armstrong

Posted By on August 26, 2012

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Neil Armstrong  was not only the first astronaut to walk on the moon, but a brilliant science minded and steely-nerved pilot who’s skills were the envy of his peers … as well as this small town Ohio boy. He grew up in Wapakoneta, Ohio, went to Purdue University in Indiana, flew 78 combat missions in the Korean War and was selected by NASA in 1962 to be trained as an astronaut.  

Armstrong was quoted, “I am, and ever will be, a white socks, pocket protector, nerdy engineer,”  and after teaching at the University of Cincinnati from 1971 thru 1979 retired to his Ohio farm. Armstrong was well known for shunning the limelight and his reluctance to talk to reporters. “As much as Neil cherished his privacy, he always appreciated the expressions of good will from people around the world and from all walks of life,” the family said. He will always be remembered for his first step on the moon quote, “That’s one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind.”

Jury says Samsung infringed on six patents held by Apple

Posted By on August 25, 2012

It’s no secret that I’m a long time Apple user and have done my part in supporting the company as computer and gadget buyer and as an $AAPL shareholder, but I’m also rebellious when their eco-system boxes out competitors. Galaxy-S-2-iPhone-4I dislike Apple telling me what software I can and can’t install on my computer devices and particularly dislike them going out of their way to keep components from working with their hardware – noticeable in recent spats with Adobe and in the restricted way users are encouraged to use online Apple and iTunes stores in order to add software, apps, etc.

Grumbling about Apple aside, I was glad to know that late Friday evening a jury has decided Apple’s innovation and product patents aren’t going to be copied without penalty (WSJ link). Those following technology in the last several years know instinctively, without even hearing the evidence, that the iPhone and iPad are being copied. Several companies have been doing this without much success up until a couple of years ago; the imitators were almost always of lessor quality (and marketed at a lower price). BUTin the last couple years one company, Samsung (with the help of Google’s Android OS), has managed to duplicate and perhaps even improve in some areas on the Apple’s iPhone, to the point the South Korean company has tremendous sales momentum and is making billions of dollars on very similar looking and functioning phones and tablets. Having both an Apple iOS product and Samsung smartphone in our home, it seemed to me pretty obvious that one company, or the other, was copying something – it wasn’t hard for me to guess which one was the innovator and which one was the copier.

In a decision, sure to be appealed, the jury in the U.S. case awarded Apple $1.05 Billion in damages … about the same time a court case in South Korea rule partly in favor of their country’s company.

Samsung infringed all but one of the seven patents at issue in the case—a patent covering the physical design of the iPad. They found all seven of Apple’s patents valid—despite Samsung’s attempts to have them thrown out. They also decided Apple didn’t violate any of the five patents Samsung asserted in the case.

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Hmm, the iPhone running Apple’s iOS and Samsung Galaxy running Google’s Android (above)

Here’s an email from Apple CEO Tim Cook to his team:

Team:

Today was an important day for Apple and for innovators everywhere.

Many of you have been closely following the trial against Samsung in San Jose for the past few weeks. We chose legal action very reluctantly and only after repeatedly asking Samsung to stop copying our work. For us, this lawsuit has always been about something much more important than patents or money. It’s about values. We value originality and innovation and pour our lives into making the best products on earth. And we do this to delight our customers, not for competitors to flagrantly copy.

We owe a debt of gratitude to the jury who invested their time in listening to our story. We were thrilled to finally have the opportunity to tell it. The mountain of evidence presented during the trial showed that Samsung’s copying went far deeper than we knew.

The jury has now spoken. We applaud them for finding Samsung’s behavior willful and for sending a loud and clear message that stealing isn’t right.

I am so very proud of the work that each of you do.
Today, values have won and I hope the whole world listens.

Tim

An Honor Flight for my father-in-law

Posted By on August 24, 2012

Brenda’s sister, Chris Skinner, escorted her father, Fred Howard, on an Honor Flight this week and visited “his” WWII memorial in Washington DC. Having had a chance to take my dad with a group of veterans in 2010 gives me insight as to what a special trip this was for them. We are getting together tonight and are looking forward to celebrating Dad Howard’s 87th birthday as well as hearing about the trip — BTW, show your appreciation and thank a veteran today. — Cincinnati’s WCPO story  and a video clip below.

Smartphones are making me rethink taking pictures

Posted By on August 23, 2012

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I’m still amazed at the notable improvements in cellphone cameras since my Palm Pre was release a few years ago. Here’s an attempt (after a slight crop) to see how images look when a close up was taken with my wife’s new Samsung Galaxy S II Epic. I can see Brenda and I are not too far away from using smartphones as our primary point and shoot cameras.  I can guarantee Brenda is not going to be toting around the little waterproof Kodak camcorder anymore … a least for snapshots; we might as well leave it at the boat. I’m even wondering just how often I’m going to slog my Canon DSLR and bag around once I get a new phone … especially when traveling by plane?

Hmm, the desktop computer has given way to the laptop and notebook computer, the notebook to the ultrabook and in many cases the tablet. The walkman was replaced by the iPod which has merged with the PDAs and cellphones. Now those three have added the point and shoot camera and camcorder and are today’s smartphones … make multiple computers and tech gadgets obsolete. So why again is my computer bag so full? </p

Converting to natural gas – what’s taking so long?

Posted By on August 22, 2012

Since our nation’s oil and gas industry has expanded its capacity to produce natural gas in recent years, it only makes sense that we take advantage of this plentiful, clean, and low cost energy resource. It sure sounds like a sensible way to keep the United States an economically competitive place to build and expand business (creating jobs). On top of that, we would be more independent when it comes to our reliance on imported oil, therefore making the never-ending unrest in the middle east less critical to our economy.

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But … our policies continue to favor less proven energy sources that do little to help American industries with the high cost of transporting raw materials to their facilities and shipping finished goods to market; small electric-only and hybrid vehicles might help urban and suburban folks when it comes to their daily runs to the grocery store or work, (if they aren’t unemployed [snide comment]), but electric vehicles do little to help in the manufacturing cycle of getting the crops from the field and transported to every step along the way that eventually ends  up in that local store. We fork over millions of tax dollars to develop wind and solar, EV car companies and infrastructure charging stations while clean natural gas sits in storage facilities and is barely profitable (for the record, I’m pro-clean renewable energy and an “all of the above” guy, but see too much crony capitalism abuse with our tax dollars).

Instead of encouraging our nation to use our abundant natural gas, we are almost forcing NG companies to ship it overseas where China and the like will pay a premium to import it. To make matters worse, we then import a much more expensive, and far dirtier, resource — crude oil – which we then use to power U.S. farm equipment, trucks and trains … and then grumble about pollution, the cost of energy and consumer prices going up. Am I the only one seeing this as insane? I guess I’m not alone since the Picken’s Plan has been around for at least 4 years and is ignored in Washington … here’s a short audio (mp3 snippet) exchange with T. Boone Pickens this morning on CNBC.

CNBC — T. Boone Pickens on Squawkbox 8/22/2012 (snippet)

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or listen (mp3) / watch the entire 14 minute interview.

CNBC — T. Boone Pickens on Squawkbox 8/22/2012 (14 min)

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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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