acl digest – 13 september 2018

Variegated Miniature Hibiscus

Here we go again – I’m writing this for two reasons. One, because this is my second attempt at the digest format. Two, because as I write this a thunderstorm is raging outside my house, a tiny and pale imitation of Hurricane Florence’s invasion of the Carolinas. The last time I stood in fear of a hurricane was when Irma hit Florida last year, passing over Orlando on its way through Georgia and on up the east coast. Irma was one of three especially fearsome hurricanes out of 2017; the other two being Harvey, which heavily destroyed Houston, and Maria, which wiped out Puerto Rico. Puerto Rico in particular will take years to fully recover, assuming no new equally destructive storms strike first.

My heart as well as genuine prayers go out to the citizens of the Carolinas in harm’s way, especially those ill suited economically to recover from such a storm. And more lies will spew out of the Orange One’s mouth like maggots from a festering wound with regards to this storm as they did with Maria and Puerto Rico.

Rescuing a Hibiscus – I’ve been working in my back yard for some time now, converting it into a small flower garden primarily to attract and sustain butterflies. Many of the flowers I’ve purchased new over time, but some of them I’ve had growing for years, such as the miniature variegated hibiscus pictured above. Around the first of this year I repotted that plant from my back yard into a large pot with fresh potting soil, gave it a slow release fertilizer, and basically kept it close to the house in the screen covered area close to the pool.

When it was repotted it had less than a dozen little leaves on it and the root system was pretty much gone. Over the last eight months it has slowly grown back to where it is entirely covered in foliage. And today I went out back to discover this one bloom on it, the first in I don’t know how many years. This one plant started out in a pot, and then I made the poor decision to plant it in the yard. It never really took to being a yard plant, and now that it’s back in a (bigger) pot than before, it’s thriving. I’m glad because this plant is over ten years old, and it covers a significant part of my personal history. I’m thinking that next season I’ll roll it outside to help attract butterflies. But it will remain potted until the day it truly dies.

The new iPhones are here! The new iPhones are here! – I will never forget the scene from the movie “The Jerk” where Steve Martin’s character is excited to find his name, in print, in the phone book. I’ve been hit with multiple Apple emails to get ready to pre-order the new iPhone XS (which I pronounce “excess”) phones. I currently have an iPhone 8 Plus, which believe it or not, is more than good enough for me. I might not have the fastest iPhone anymore, but I still have the second fastest, and you know what? I’m OK with that.

I don’t know if I’ll never get an iPhone Excess, but I believe I can certainly wait until maybe later next year to think about it. Right now I’m more excited about the imminent release of iOS 12. I’ve been beta testing it on my original iPad Pro 9.7″ model, and it really is faster than iOS 11. Hopefully it’s more bug free and consequently more stable than iOS 11. Only time and use will tell.

The insanity of camera gear prices – In case you’re not a camera gearhead like me, Nikon and Canon both released so-called full frame mirrorless cameras, i.e. cameras that don’t have the flapping SLR mirror in front of their sensors. Those cameras are the Z6 and Z7 for Nikon and the EOS R for Canon. Both makers re-invented the lens mount, making all existing brand lenses obsolete with those new bodies, but not to worry! You can spend hundreds of extra dollars picking up an adapter to use that older glass.

The biggest punch to the gut is the cost of these newest camera bodies, starting at $2,000 for the Z6 and going up to $3,500 for the Z7. The EOS R is “only” $2,300 for that body. And let’s not get started about lens costs. Nikon is on the low end starting around $600, with prices pushing up to over $3,000 for zooms from both Canon and Nikon. I personally will never own either camera nor any camera from either brand.

I’m an egalitarian type of photographer who believes you shouldn’t have to spend the equivalent of a year’s rent just for the privilege of owning said cameras. I’m more in the several hundred dollar range for camera gear, like you could spend on the old Pentax K1000 or Minolta SRT-100 film cameras from decades ago.

I predict this will drive more people to use the cameras that come on increasingly advancing smart phones, such as the just announced iPhone Excesses. I personally use Olympus micro four thirds, and I expect for that mount to slowly fade away. Which would be a real shame as there are a number of low-cost yet high quality Olympus (and yes, Panasonic) mirrorless interchangeable lens cameras that mere mortals can afford.

acl digest – 9 september 2018

Bo giving me his best Mona Lisa smile.

Starting something different, by stealing someone else’s idea – I’ve decided to steal a method of post writing from science fiction author John Scalzi (https://whatever.scalzi.com) which he refers to as the digest. It’s a type of long-form writing broken up into shorter sections. Based on the way he writes, those various sections are loosely related, but I don’t think they have to be. Anyway, I want to try this because I have a lot of ideas, many of which are fairly short. Perhaps I can use this as an aid to help me write more with better overall quality.

John McCain’s death – It’s been a few weeks since John McCain passed. All the drama occurred during the week between his passing and finally being laid to rest at the Naval Academy. The entire week was punctuated repeatedly by Donald Trump’s week-long slow burn rants in the White House, with his being banned from the McCain funeral just as he was from Barbara Bush’s funeral. What will always stand out in my mind is how McCain was able to masterfully troll Trump from beyond the grave.

Aretha Franklin’s death – There is so much about Aretha to remember, going back to when I was a kid with my first transistor radio in Atlanta, but for me personally, I will always remember her scene on the “The Blues Brothers”:

Google strikes again – People are really ‘woke’ about Google and its powerful effects on the Internet. A small example of this is how Google Chrome is now displaying URLs with the release of version 69. Google’s new URL modification scheme, in which they’re trying to simplify how a URL is displayed in the omni-box has caused considerable controversy, especially in the tech groups that actually care about such things, and which helped push Chrome forward in the early days. Basically the latest Chrome hides ‘www’, for example, to make the URL simpler and easier to read for the great unwashed masses. If you want the behavior to be what it was before Google decided to ‘fix’ it for everyone, you can follow the directions here: Here’s How to Disable Google Chrome’s Confusing New URL Hiding Scheme. I’ve fixed my Chrome installations on every system where I have Chrome installed, and I also fixed it in Vivaldi. Yes, because Vivaldi is consuming the Chrome engine within Vivaldi, it’s also fallen prey to Chrome’s nefarious schemes to totally control the web. Just type ‘chrome://flags’ into the Vivaldi omni-box, follow the directions linked to above, and watch as the exact same flag comes up. Such fun…

Social media usage – I have accounts on all the usual spots, particularly Facebook and Twitter. Since January 2018 I’ve cut back considerably on Twitter and Facebook by just deleting the apps off my iPhone. If I feel the need to go slumming in either place, I do it via the web. The experience is better with the web page than the app, as more capabilities are available for tighter control. The only social media apps left on my iPhone are Instagram and VSCO. I spend very little time on VSCO, and I don’t follow that many on Instagram. I feel myself drifting further away from social media. That drifting away is affecting how I approach writing on the blog, with me wanting to write less and less over time. Considering how much the web has become weaponized, and how easy it is to do so because the social media platforms have no real controls, the only way to protect myself it would appear is to just not go there at all.

The Cats – We lost another cat, Ellipses. The pain of that loss triggered memories of my loss of Lucy, so I had to deal with that. But the house is calm again (it didn’t get all that crazy) and being down to just two cats is actually nice. Both Bo and Luke vie for my attention, in a good way. What is peculiar is that both of the boys are now spending time on the same kitchen table Ellipses stayed on for all those many years before her passing. I don’t know if that means they miss her or not, but I wonder if they expect her to suddenly appear on the table and for things to go back to normal for them.

My knees – I’m still dealing with pain and problems walking, but not nearly as badly as the first of this year. I’m spending more time in our therapy pool exercising and just floating. The water is warm and being in the pool takes considerable stress off my joints, especially my knees. They’ve both been replaced (the left as a partial in 2012, the right as a full in 2016) so there’s not much more that can be done. I have no desire to go under the knife again unless it’s absolutely necessary. So I guess I’d better get serious and continue working in that pool out back.