Spring clean up leads to a bigger front porch project

Posted By on April 21, 2012

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I was planning to tackle our decaying concrete front porch myself, but after purchasing the thin pavers and contemplating the preparation masonry work, I opted instead to hire a skilled mason to at least repair the brick trim. Of course after getting into it I’m finding badly rusting iron railings and more than just weakened brick trim. Currently it might just be enough work to de-rust, repaint and re-attach the railing and leave the brick, concrete and pavers to the professions?

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It looks like this minor project is becoming major fairly quick; I might end up rebuilding the entire front porch at this rate!

EDIT: Adding a video on 4/23/2012 after a little more progress. (really just testing the embed but having problems compressing and keeping audio???)

According to this there aren’t many reasons to check email

Posted By on April 20, 2012

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Tech Friday: The new GetPocket ReadItLater service

Posted By on April 20, 2012

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http://www.getpocket.com

ReadItLater.com is/was one of the better services for saving web pages for later reading or archive research. I’ve used a couple different services over the year on the computer, but have found the new ReadItLater better than most — and the free services is excellent. It is now called Pocket (getpocket.com) and has an excellent mobile app … at least the one that runs on the iPad. Since I’m currently restricted in printing from the iPad or creating PDF doc from pages, being able to save images, pages or videos along with just personally emailing links, copied test or screenshot to myself is my favorite way to save items. Besides using a browser bookmarklet, one of the more impressing components is emailing the link to an add@getpocket.com address that puts a copy of the site so it can be read later. The iPad is super handy as these files are (or can be) downloaded so they can be read without Internet service.

Can average Americans get their heads around these numbers?

Posted By on April 19, 2012

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Volkswagen TDIs still dominate diesel sales in the U.S.

Posted By on April 19, 2012

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TDI diesels from Volkswagen are the only mid priced diesels available, so it is no wonder VW has 58% of all diesel sales in the U.S. As the new Passat TDIs become more available, expect their sales to nip away at the Jetta TDI dominance.

Allen Schaeffer, DTF’s executive director, said in a statement that, "I expect clean diesel auto sales to increase further as several new diesel cars are introduced in the U.S. market in the next year."

Once those other vehicles arrive, we’ll see how the market shakes out. Right now, it’s pretty much all Jetta TDI, all the time. A while back, we spoke with Lars Ullrich, the director of marketing and business excellence, diesel systems North America, for Robert Bosch LLC. He told us that diesel Jettas made up 44 percent of all diesels sold in the U.S. last year, which makes the Jetta sort of the Prius of diesels in America. Last year, Volkswagen had 58 percent of all diesel sales in the U.S.

LINK

Test recording a little audio with the iPad while mobile

Posted By on April 19, 2012

This content is restricted.

Fake leather and Naugahyde – Save the Naugas

Posted By on April 18, 2012

Ingenuity Mars Helicopter In the late 60s and 70s, polyester clothing was popular (think leisure suits) and plastics were making their way in to products that were traditionally made of natural materials. Back then, we would joke about ranchers herding up the wild “Naugas” to fill the demand for naugahyde (the pleather of the day). But the fake leather of those years was more akin to vinyl and took on so many negative connotations that people went out of their way to buy “genuine” leather products.

Most people I know still frown at vinyl for clothing and products, but the synthetic look-a-like leather qualities have improved. I still see it as something to avoid and a sign of lessor quality, but recognize the improvements (ventilation, perforations, etc.) I am also noticing that it is getting harder to find “genuine” leather and the fake stuff seems to be making a comeback.

Could it have something to do with the animal rights movement or a new marketing push? I’ve notice more and more being used and accepted, even if the material has a few environmental downsides. Marketers have rebranded faux leather as Vegan Leather, Leatherette and Koskin … and I’m finding it everywhere . It might be time to start up the “Save the Nauga” campaign again. (really though, it use is bugging me in automotive seats … and it is hard to find a new Volkswagen with leather seats)

Naugahyde is made from skins of the Nauga, an odd yet engagingly friendly creature native to Sumatra. (link)

More history below …

A Nauga Story

This is only an introduction to Nauga history. There is more to come. Look for new articles on Naugas’ culinary preferences, customs and traditions of Naugas around the world, and other Nauga facts and trivia!

The small chameleon-like animals known as Naugas™ have long been known as the source of beautiful and durable fabrics that look like fine, soft leather. And since Naugas shed their hydes without harm to themselves, the fabrics they help make came to be known as Naugahyde®, The Cruelty Free Fabric™.

Despite the popularity of these little animals and their hydes, little is known of their origins and how they first came to America.
Some researchers say Naugas™ are native to the island of Sumatra. Ancient Nauga artifacts recently found near the Coliseum in Rome have, however, cast doubt on this theory.

One prominent historian believes the first Naugas arrived in America in 1778 when they delivered designer clothes from France to George Washington’s Continental Army. Others suggest they arrived far earlier, pointing out an abandoned tenth century Viking settlement that was recently unearthed in Newfoundland. Among the tantalizing evidence is the discovery of two Nauga names, Olaf the Red and Erik the Navy Blue, on a fragment of stone tablet at the site.

But like most immigrants many Naugas simply arrived with little more than their hydes on their backs and a willingness to work hard for a better future.

Before long Naugas™ were succeeding in many industries and professions.

Thomas Maroon built a nationwide chain of dry-cleaning shops.

Catherine Orange completed the first solo transatlantic flight by a Nauga in 1932.

Cornelius VanderNauga inspired an entire generation of Naugas to excel when he authored The Horatio Nauga Story, a quasi-autobiographical account of a young Nauga who found that fame and fortune could be within anyone’s grasp.

Author F. Scott Fitzgerald acknowledged his literary debt to VanderNauga in his memoirs when he noted that, "…as much as one might find fault with the premises underpinning VanderNauga’s writings, his advice on always having a ‘thick skin’ when it comes to criticism is as fresh today as when it was written."

In VanderNauga’s later years he continued to follow his own advice and amassed a fortune that rivaled those of Henry Ford and John D. Rockefeller by convincing his fellow Naugas to shed their hydes for the automotive seating and home furniture markets.

Among VanderNauga’s charitable legacies is the VanderNauga Foundation, a nonprofit organization that supports aspiring artists and house painters around the world.

Despite their small stature, Naugas™ have been closely associated with sports in America for more than one hundred years. What they often lacked in athletic skills was more than offset by sheer determination, and their ability to shed their hydes in order to provide uniforms for their teammates.

Naugas became especially popular around colleges, where they attended sporting events in large numbers. Their habit of attending games with their hydes matching the home team’s colors is thought by some observers to be the first verifiable instance of fans dressing in team colors on game days.

The list of Naugas in sports is too long to mention here, but includes many well-known shortstops and right-fielders in professional baseball, and multiple medal winners in the Olympics–mostly in synchronized swimming events.

Nick "Red" Nauga, holder of football’s all-time point scoring record, was a charter Hall of Fame inductee. Unfortunately, Nick retired a bitter Nauga after football’s decision to place an asterisk next to his scoring record. The asterisk noted that nearly all of Nick’s points were scored while he was holding on to successful field goals and extra points as they sailed through the air.

Until the early 1900’s Naugas™ were hunted to near extinction in many parts of the world. Even in America, Nauga hunts were a common occurrence well into the 1800’s. It was only after widespread newspaper reports of hunters aboard moving trains shooting Naugas for sport and leaving untold thousands dead and dying along the railroad tracks that public outrage brought an end to the slaughter.

In 1905 President Theodore Roosevelt signed legislation that gave Naugas the right to vote. Arguing for passage of the "Nauga Amendment" before a rare joint session of Congress, Roosevelt declared, "You must not vote for this bill because it is right, but because it is the right thing to do." As applause echoed through Congress, Roosevelt swept a nearby Nauga up in his arms, smiled broadly, and turned toward a waiting bank of newspaper photographers.

The photograph of Roosevelt and the unidentified Nauga was on the front pages of newspapers across the country. In the Nauga mania that followed, enterprising toy manufacturers began making "Teddy Naugas," small stuffed Nauga replicas wearing wire rim eyeglasses in the distinctive Roosevelt style.

In spite of the violence that many Nauga families had experienced in years past, and the fact that Naugas are invariably pacifists, Naugas have consistently donated their hydes in order to make jackets, gloves, and other essential items whenever their country called upon them.

In retrospect, the years following the second World War were the start of a golden age for Nauga™ culture. Some thirty-five million Naugas were born between 1946 and 1964, a time period often referred to as the "Nauga Boom."

Not typically known to be rebellious, millions of young Naugas nonetheless found themselves in the forefront of a generational wave that changed everything in its wake; music, art, and life in general would never be the same again.

During the 1950’s Naugas packed theaters every weekend night to listen to Nauga musicians that would soon become Rock and Roll legends. Elvis Paisley and Chuck Raspberry played such favorites as "Blue Naugahyde® Shoes" to capacity crowds.
Typical notions of what constituted art were turned upside down as Nauga artists crashed upon the scene in a creative burst of color and texture unlike anything that had proceeded it. Modern Art finally achieved legitimacy with general audiences through the works of Nauga-inspired artists such as Picasso and Dali. Following a landmark exhibition of paintings by Nauga artists at the Museum of Modern Art in 1972, one art critic wrote, "it is only now, with so many works by Nauga artists in one place, that I can even begin to comprehend the scope of the revolution that has altered the very way we see our world."

But like so much of history, a few Naugas became famous and powerful while the majority took care of the tasks that constituted the bulk of their day-to-day existence: work, school, and dreams of better things for their children.

In the field of science and technology Naugas have often labored in obscurity due to an unusual string of bad luck. Among the famous inventions of not-so-famous Nauga inventors are vending machines that accept bent and foreign coins, the rotary engine, and ambidextrous coffee cups.

No Nauga has experienced greater misfortune than astronaut Milton "Buzz" Nauga. Owing to an unfortunate incident involving a clogged hair dryer, "Buzz" narrowly missed becoming the first American to walk on the moon. Little more than a footnote in history books today (because no one can ever remember that he was the second American to reach the moon), "Buzz" is content to endorse automotive oil additives on television and play golf with former U.S. presidents.

In appreciation for the value that Naugas™ provide to them when they shed their hydes, a consortium of companies that produce products made from Naugahyde fabric established an extensive benefits program for Naugas in 1975. Funded with a contribution made for each hyde shed, the Nauga Defense Fund (or NDF) plays a central role in making sure that Naugas are protected and cared for throughout their lives.

The NDF Legal Program was instrumental in passing laws prohibiting the testing of cosmetics on Naugas.

NDF funded retirement villages throughout the country help to ensure that Naugas can spend their retirement years in secure and comfortable surroundings.

LINK

Warren Buffett informs shareholders of Stage 1 Prostate Cancer

Posted By on April 17, 2012

Warren Buffett: “I have been diagnosed with Stage 1 Prostate Cancer. My condition is not remotely life-threatening. I feel great — as if I were in my normal excellent health — and my energy level is 100 percent. I discovered the cancer because my PSA level (an indicator my doctors had regularly checked for many years) recently jumped beyond its normal elevation and a biopsy seemed warranted. I will let shareholders know immediately should my health situation change. Eventually, of course, it will; but I believe that day is a long way off.”

Posted via email from RichC’s posterous

Space Shuttle Discovery takes a final ride to Washington DC

Posted By on April 17, 2012

It is still quite remarkable to see NASA haul around a giant space shuttle piggybacked on a modified Boeing747, this time it is Discovery heading to its final Washington DC Smithsonian home. For those of us who grew up with the entire space program it is indeed a sad end to an adventurous and exciting time of exploration. Here’s hoping we will return again … maybe through the private sector and experimental aviation?

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Personal reflection regarding space exploration has me remembering a few key moments from my past. Like watching the moon landing on our tiny black and white TV with my family in 1969, or meeting the astronaut John Glenn in our backyard at age 13 (he was campaigning). Pretty memorable stuff for a kid growing up. challengerdisasterexplosion1986Then there was my attempt to watch a shuttle launch in January of 1986, with Brenda 5 months pregnant with Katelyn … but after waiting in the cold, the launch was scrubbed because there was ice. Sadly, an attempt was made the next day to launch Challenger resulting in the loss of ship and crew … shaking NASA to the core. Who can forget Houston Control issuing the “Challenger, go with throttle up” and Commander Dick Scobee replying, “Roger, go with throttle up.” It still gives me chills.

Challenger, go wirh throttle up – Jan. 28, 1986

NASA and the country regrouped and improved on their mistakes and flaws stringing an impressive decade plus of flights and triumphs in building the space station, telescopes, launching satellites and performing experiments. Enough so that after touring Kennedy Space Center on our family vacation my daughter Katelyn headed to space camp in Huntsville Alabama.

Unfortunately confidence grew and flaws were missed or under calculated and the space columbiadebris2003shuttle Columbia incinerated on reentry spreading parts over south and south central United States. Again, the nation mourned the loss of shuttle and crew.

Since my daughter was interested in NASA and space, the local Cincinnati television station interviewed her regarding her thoughts. She continued her interest in space (buying a telescope with her own money), science and medicine …. eventually deciding she wanted to be a flight surgeon for NASA. Great aspirations. Her high school physics teacher noted this and nominated her for a NASA Sharp internship at the University of New Mexico after her junior year of high school. She worked on biomedical research and even had her name added to an scientific paper on immunosensors (remember SARS). Along with the work, she gained confidence in living away from home and had opportunities to visit places like the  labs of the White Sands Test Facilities.

But today is about the Space Shuttle Discovery … thought the arrival was capture quite well by photographers and a Washington Post writer

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Discovery made its first pass over Dulles 10 minutes ahead of schedule, spurring stragglers to run up the stairs to the parking deck roof, where 400 people gathered from as far as Pittsburgh and North Carolina.

“Awe-inspiring, just amazing,” said Kathy Hertz Kinter, 35, of Clifton after Discovery, its modified 747 carrier and a white dart of a NASA T-38 chase plane winged over Dulles and turned right to head toward the District.

“It was just like, ‘whoosh,’ and it went right over our heads,” said Hertz Kinter, who brought her son Sam, 9. “Maybe this will propel Sam to be an astronaut.”

Photographers on the parking deck roof perched atop coolers and chairs as Discovery returned 45 minutes later, easing down runway 1R for a second pass before circling the airport and finally flaring to a landing.

“There it is!” someone yelled as the 747’s landing lights appeared to the west and the crowd began to clap.

Weathered, battered and beat-up looking, Discovery’s scuffed side panels told the story of its 39 trips to space.

A one knee proposal + a beautiful ring + yes = ENGAGED

Posted By on April 15, 2012

KandD_120412Well maybe the above math may not be as simple as it looks … but it computes in the case of Katelyn and Drew. Ready or not, it is time for this dad to let go of his daughter. Drew Oostra has asked my daughter Katelyn to marry him and she replied “yes” … although I might have to edit the answer since I’m unsure “yes” was her exact word?
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The inside story: My future son-in-law secretly asked me to breakfast a couple weeks ago in Columbus. At that time he informed me of his intention to propose to Katelyn and asked for my permission. Humbled to have been so respectfully asked, my answer was of course in the affirmative (with conditions).

Katelyn has known Drew since 2004 when the two started their undergraduate schooling together at Kent/NEOUCOM; they continued to be close friends and dated throughout medical school and their residencies. My daughter selected Nationwide Children’s Hospital in Columbus partially (probably mostly) because Drew was at OSU Medical Center and they spend most of what little free time residents have together (although both do other things too). In thinking about Drew, I have never met a young man who is as kind, polite, gentlemanly, has the heart of a servant and loves Katelyn. As a bonus, he is also afflicted with a blindness towards Katelyn’s foibles – how perfect is that? [that’s a joke, dear daughter, you are of course perfect in every way!]  Whatever the Oostra’s parenting secret, it should be patterned by all of us; their son is a wonderful man – and if I were 25 or so years younger, I would have wanted Drew as a best friend.

KandD_120414_IMAG0269After meeting with Drew for breakfast, I tried to keep my lips sealed about his intent. I unfortunately failed … and shared our covert breakfast meeting with my wife and son (partially hoping it might help him in the future) … and of course tweeted it to the world (no, no … just kidding). Anyway I’m glad to see the proposal sooner rather than later as it was challenging to keep this from my “inquiring daughter” … she is a “nosy” one (even Drew knows this, the reason he suggested a morning breakfast meeting rather than an evening dinner).

From what I’ve gathered, Saturday’s proposal was disguised with a going away get-together for a close friend in the Akron area. They drove up and detoured for a picnic at a park with a small lake … the place where they had their first official date years ago. The thought was very much appreciated by Katelyn, as was the ring. According to my wife, it was a ring that Katelyn had pointed out in a magazine at one point – hmm,  to get the exact ring is pretty special and from the photo (below) it certainly is. Congratulations, with love to the both of you.

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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.
My Desultory Blog