Friday, November 27, 2009

A blessedly quiet Thanksgiving

We had a really nice day.

As things worked out, Rob, Amanda, and Nathan arrived about 6:00 p.m. That left us with a well-planned menu and lots of time to get it all put together. Everything was done and ready to serve except for the gravy failure. We just did without the gravy.

Rob brought his new camera.....and Ebay acquisition. Like me , he has tired of the short comings of the point and shoot digital cameras and sought to get a good SLR camera. Unlike me, he got serious and went after one. He found a used unit through the WWW that cost only and arm and not both an arm and leg. He tells me that's his Christmas present...Amanda's is a TV that hangs over the fireplace mantel.

Laura has no big news; at least none she's shared with her dad. She has given up two boyfriends in the last several months, but was spending time with the one before them again (I think; at least that's what I think I've pieced together.) Poor kid wasn't feeling good today (Friday). Sounds like the 24 hour crud I had not long ago...let's hope it's the 24 hour crud.

Nathan is getting big. I over heard Sue working on his Mom about setting a christening date....she has gotten a gown for him, but it will soon be too small. I didn't hear whether there was consensus for the date.

No big news from me. I have no idea what Sue wants or needs for Christmas. Maybe I'll do some online shopping when I finish up this note and find some inspiration.

Friday, November 20, 2009

Work stuff today

Things are moving forward mostly, but a few setbacks that are frankly staggering.

Found a flaw in the way the new forecasting software is handling one scenario. Our software provider is in denial about the issue. We think they are violating a basic premise of the business they sold us to support. It will be interesting to watch this play out.

On the other hand, as a whole we are making progress and improvement. So, over all I'm pleased with where we are....but the software problem we found will not go away by itself, it will only compound with time.

Also at work, we will be installing SAP to run the business....a really big deal. Both my boss and his will be assigned to the project full time. I will be tapped to be a "subject matter expert" supporting the implementation while seeing that my every day duties are performed as well. This is a project that will take two years to complete and which will literally reshape how the entire company does business.....like I said, a really big deal.

In the more mundane vane, I need to schedule to use up 4.5 days of vacation before the end of the year. I've agreed to cover the week between Christmas and New Years when nearly everybody else will be gone. I'll probably work a series of 4-day weeks.

Monday, November 16, 2009

Internet Phone

Well how 'bout that?!

Early results show that this technology is actually for real.

I have tried out Magic Jack with an extra phone we had laying around. It sends, receives, voice mail works, caller ID shows incoming phone #'s, etc. etc.

There was a tinny quality to the sound, but when I hooked up a better phone that went away. Cheap phone = crummy sound. Better phone = sounds just fine. Called a few long distance friends, enjoyed the visits and everybody heard everything just fine. No skips, jerks, pauses, stutters, echoes. Nothin' The only stuff to complain about at all went away when I removed the cheap phone.


Magic Jack will support 911 calls from home....that's part of the painless initial setup. Opening the package was harder than performing the installation. There's some advertising during the install process that's mildly annoying, but easy to ignore and get on with life.


In order to work, one needs high speed Internet (we already had that) a reasonably powerful PC that wasn't already maxed out on other stuff (already had that too). Therefore, why pay AT&T for service at $40 a month? Beats me.

Magic Jack will not work when the power is out; so a second phone source is a good thing (cell phones....we already have those too)

So, early results all positive.

Friday, November 13, 2009

Trying out an Internet phone

At the risk of promoting a product...

Giving a trial to Magic Jack. Tired of paying AT&T nearly $50 a month. It wouldn't be so bad if they gave you an honest rate, but they quote a rate and then tack on a gillion mysterious fees and taxes. I think it's bull.

So, gambled $40 on Magic Jack after doing research. If it's not what it's cracked up to be, we're not out much. If it's good, we can pocket cash we've been giving away.

Installation on our end is done very painlessly. I'm supposed to get an email within an hour from Magic Jack with a confirmation to get stuff working.

.....supposed to give us unlimited local and U.S. long distance. I invested $40 for the first year (hardware and service). $20 next year.

Will keep you posted.

Wednesday, November 4, 2009

At the risk of boring the world

I have to get something off my chest. I need to thank one of my high school teachers; one I didn't properly appreciate all those years ago.

I have hated studying mathematics since I was in 4th grade. That was when they came out with 'new math' and something about new math and I never ever clicked.

We would get reading assignments in math classes, and no matter how hard I tried I could never make any sense out of the text explanation of the math concepts. Didn't matter, grade school, high school, college...math text books might as well have been written in any number of foreign languages, but not English.

I hated math.

I had a little fun with geometry, shapes were cool. Trig, on the other hand was absolute nonsense.

In college, I passed two pre-calculus classes, another in "intuitive" calculus, and other mathematically oriented courses in statistical analysis (oh, I hated that one) , and chemistry, physics, even ecology classes that required strong mathematical skills.

Most of the credit for my surviving those belongs to a high school teacher of mine, Orville Keith Miller. OK or Keith Miller was someone I knew through the church where I grew up before I had him for class. Keith was not the most adept at social skills (sorry Keith) and that was apparent even to a high school junior.

Yet, he turned my life around, partly because he was direct, honest, caring, and forthright, if not polished and tactful.

When a junior at Abraham Lincoln High School in Council Bluffs Iowa in 1970, OK was my algebra teacher. I was bright enough to slide by and was doing just that. One Sunday during coffee hour after church, OK said to my mother (her words to me, I don't know what Keith actually said), "It's a crying shame that Jim isn't as smart as your other boys."

Now, if you wanted to get my Mom riled, the best way was to criticize one of her cubs. But, this momma bear was bright enough to know that going directly into combat with the criticizer was not going to get anywhere. Rather, she sat me down, and said, "Are you going to let him get away with that?"

It's just occurred to me that those two, the teacher and the parent, may have cooked up a plot to get me to actually put forth some effort and learn. (Mom was a pretty good applied psychologist in her day.) One way or the other, whether by accident or whether in collusion with Mom, Keith Miller made me learn math whether I liked it or not.

I never have learned to like mathematical studies. But guess what I make my living doing?...working with numbers.

My job involves analyzing data about inventories, projecting inventory consumption, predicting how historic demand patterns will translate into future demands. My responsibilities dealing with math extend into the millions and billions of dollars.

So Mr. Miller, OK, Keith, I want to publicly thank you for the solid grounding I received. I was much too hard on you in my own mind all those years ago. You contributed dramatically to the success of my career.

I've tried finding Mr. Miller on line. He's long since deservedly retired from my alma mater, ALHS. Anybody who can get this post to him....I'd be grateful.

JRE