Friday, January 17, 2020

Vehicular aspirations


This is from a while ago, but it’s been about a week and a half at work, so I’m just slapping this up today.


I thought the conceit of driving around the smallest car you can buy with such a big-dream declaration was kind of very American.



Thursday, January 16, 2020

Iacta alea est


Man, when it comes to pettiness and desperate attempts at willie-waving (no matter how small the willie), Republicans just take the biscuit.

(Although Nancy Pelosi has a bigger and steelier set of cojones than everyone in the GOP put together.)

Fasten your seatbelts. It’s going to be a bumpy, nasty ride, and my money’s on there being no bottom to the slime in the Senate

Also: he's been impeached since 18 December.



Wednesday, January 15, 2020

Customer feedback


I’ve been using a spreadsheet to manage my to-do list for an alpha test at work. Because we’re an Office365 shop, we use Teams for collaboration, and when you upload a file to Teams, it goes all SharePoint on you. I do not like the user experience via SharePoint, so I’m constantly moving my files out of there and into the application (Word, PowerPoint, Excel) to do the actual work.

Well, on Monday I noticed the middle option on this pop-up for the first time:


No, dudes, you do not want me to tell you what I think of Excel. You do not.



Tuesday, January 14, 2020

Honkers on the move


Canada geese are the dark side of our neighbors to the north. They hang out in gangs and seem to do nothing but shove native birds out of the way and crap. And they seem to like the People’s Republic right much; they’ve decided that NoVa is as far south as they want to go of a winter.

I haven’t actually seen them a lot this year, but the other day I went for a walk and discovered them congregating on the grounds of the corporate HQ near my house.




TBH, all I could think of was what they might taste like roasted.




Monday, January 13, 2020

Gratitude Monday: eyes and ears



(I’d gone to one of them in 2018 and costed a pair: with my prescription, the Transitions and whatnot, they’d have been $1500+.)

Well, this time, I scoped out a couple in Annandale and Arlington, and just went ahead. With the insurance, they were $755—and you never know exactly what VSP actually pays for—but I wanted them, so…

While I was getting the eye exam, I also got a prescription for computer glasses, since the ones I’d been using dated from about 2013, and they, too, were out of date. I took the prescription to Costco, since VSP only covers one pair of glasses per year, and I did not fancy forking over $$$$ of my own money. I ordered two pairs—one for work and one for home—and picked them up the following Saturday during a blitz of errand running.

Great, huh?

Except that when I got to work the next Monday, I didn't have my mobile phone. Back at home, I tore through the place, but couldn’t find it. Then I started calling round to the places I’d been on the Saturday—Wegman’s, Walgreen’s… No joy.

Damn.

Now, I do not live on my mobile, but still, it’s a nuisance to have to replace one, and this one was only a couple of months old. So I went through an exercise a friend of mine uses: picturing when was the last time I could remember using it. Well, yeah—I’d checked emails while waiting for one of the optical guys to help me. So I called Costco Optical, and the fellow who answered said, yes, a phone had been found at the end of the day on Saturday, and it had been turned in to the administrative office.

I called the office and described it: Pixel 3 with a black rubber card holder on the back, stamped with the Tesla logo. (Swag from the Grace Hopper Celebration of Women in Computing.) Yep—my phone was there. On Tuesday morning, I popped over, got my phone and put it on the charger, because it was completely dead.

So today I’m grateful that I have insurance that mitigates even some of the cost of glasses; that I was able to get computer glasses for home and work without taking out a second mortgage; and that the Costco guys turned in my phone and I didn’t have to buy a new one.