Technology


Wow! I didn’t realize it had been so long since I posted. Then, I just found this site: http://lastyearsmodel.org/ and thought it was pretty cool.
Here’s my version and my list of “old tech”:

  • A 9 year old no-name, many-times refurbished PC with a 1gig processor, 2GB memory and 40Gb HD for a linux file server/test bed.
  • Another 8 or 9 year old no-name many-times refurbed for a test bed — Windows Home Server
  • Two nokia 1900 cell phones (with basic Net10 service $15/month!) for cell service. The newer phone is 2 years old, the older 4 and both still working great. Not even a battery problem!
  • My scanner is a 6 year old Canon Lide20
  • And my Laptop is a Toshiba A25-S207 == 6 years old and still going strong.

Truthfully, every bit of this stuff meets my needs (and I demand a lot of my equipment)

So, what is YOUR technology status? Do you really need the latest and greatest?

I ran into a former high school student a few days ago. Harried with her college school work and working full-time to survive, she still looked happy.

Photo Courtesy Charles_Chan

Photo Courtesy Charles_Chan


Let me tell you a little about her. Mary had been kicked out of her mother’s house at age 15. she had lived with aunt for  few months – until she got tired of having a teenager hanging around, cramping her own lifestyle. (more…)

Well, I’ve tried not to let more than a day or so pass between posts. Unfortunately, the last few days have seen Vista totally screw up my video card configuration and nothing I did seemed to get it corrected. Had to start all over again. Well, actually, I booted back into the WindowsXP drive I still had hanging around under a dual boot.

Meanwhile, back at the ranch, the lady of the house wanted me to add a couple of menu selections to a DVD she had. That took some more finagling. Finally figured that one out, too. Adobe Premiere Elements doesn’t like .VOB or .MPG files very much. And all the digging around led me down all kinds of weird pathways. I was downloading all kinds of converters. None of which worked, by the way.

So anyway, I finally ran across a site that suggested that I simply change the .vob to a .mpg file and import them into Windows Movie Maker. Worked like a charm!

As I write this, the file is being saved as a single DV-AVI file which should allow me to then import that into Premiere so that I can create the menus that I want. Movie Maker may have that capacity, but since I’m not real familiar with it, decided better the devil I know. So, I’ll pull the file into Premiere, add the menu and go on about my business.

In other news, I’ll be back to writing something worthwhile in a couple of days. Right now I’m just trying to get my schedule settled out and figure out how best to work this blogging thing into my routines.

Telephones can be aggravating critters. To manage them, I have two basic rules:

  1. I don’t answer calls from numbers I don’t recognize because they are usually either wrong numbers or telemarketers, neither of which do I want to be bothered with.
  2. I don’t answer when I’m busy doing other things. I keep in mind always that I control the interruptions in my life and I generally don’t like being interrupted when I’m working. So the phone rings.

Time management gurus all encourage you to manage your interruptions rather than letting them manage you. That’s what I try to do with the phone.

Sometimes these rules create even more aggravation because some people just don’t seem to get the message.

Which part of “I’m not who you’re looking for” did you not understand?

Several days ago while at work my cellphone rang. I didn’t recognize the number and since I was busy, I silenced the phone and went about my business.

Several minutes later, it rang again. Same number. I did the same thing.

Now, I have to point out here that I have voice mail that clearly states my name. If the caller had the wrong number they’d know that simply by listening. But, then again, maybe not.

After the fourth time in a span of less than four minutes, it was clear that the caller wasn’t getting the message so I answered. Now, I still don’t know who they were looking for, their responses were unintelligible. But it was clearly not me. I told them they had the wrong number and hung up.

Now this was apparently a really not-so-bright individual. A few minutes later the phone rang again. Same area code, different number. I guess the caller figured their phone was the problem so they’d try again from another.

I answered with “This is Kevin. If you’re not trying to get Kevin, then you have the wrong number. That will be true no matter how many times you call or what phone you call from".” Yeah, I know it was a bit rude, but then so, too, is repeatedly calling a wrong number.

They finally got the message:  They didn’t call back.

Dr. Phil likes to you the phrase: “How’s that working for ya?” This is, of course, rooted in the idea that if you keep doing the same thing the same way, you’ll always get the same result.

On another day we’ll talk about why this can be a good thing, but if what you’re doing isn’t getting the result you want, maybe your need to try something different.

And, maybe that’s what this caller thought they were doing by calling from a different phone; they were  doing something different. I guess I’ll never know.

This caller, of course, isn’t the only one to not get the message. Too often people will call and when the phone rolls over to voice mail will hang up and call again.

Why?

Clearly, if I didn’t answer I’m either not at home, or choose not to answer the phone right then. Calling right back doesn’t change anything. (well, it really does. It makes me very aggravated.)

I’m not going to answer.

It’s my choice; leave a message.

What interruptions fall into your pet-peeves list?

I often remind my fledgling nurses that there are two kinds of nurses: those that everyone wants to work with and those that nobody wants to work with. While I focus here on nurses, the same ideas could  be applied in virtually any work

(more…)

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