Yearly Archives: 2007

Wheels

Datsun310repairmanual_2
I’ve never been much of a car guy, so it wasn’t terribly important to me that I have a "cool" car in high school.  In fact I was tickled pink when my Mom bought me a chocolate brown Datsun 310 hatchback after my junior year of high school.  The car had power-nothing and no air conditioning which meant you really had to muscle the steering wheel if you were trying to pull out of a parking space and you broke into a full sweat in the process.  It also had tires the width of your average mountain bike and topped out at around 55 MPH if you were going down hill with a stiff wind at your back.  I loved that car.

Before Mom bought the car used from the dealership just down the road she got the sales guy, a student at GMU, to agree to give me lessons on driving a stick.  In the year that I’d had my license I had only driven our Oldsmobile sedan with an automatic transmission.  So on the fateful day of our purchase the guy drove us over to the parking lot at Fairfax High School (Fairfax, VA) and gave me a 1/2 hour lesson on the use of the clutch.  Let me point out that we didn’t drive up one hill during that time.  After returning to the dealership and finalizing the purchase the guy handed me the keys and Mom said she’d follow me home.  I stalled four times in the 1/2 mile between the dealership and our place.

That first night of having my own wheels I decided to take my girlfriend out on a date.  I somehow drove the 10 miles to her house without hitting a stoplight which meant that I didn’t have to deal with a lot of gearing up.  On the way to the movies I hit a red light on a steep hill and it occured to me that I had a real challenge on my hands.  I pondered a moment and decided the most prudent course would be to use the hand brake and get everything revved up and then release the hand brake and we’d be off.  I did this seven straight times and stalled every time, suffering through four light changes and the incessant giggling of my not-so-sympathetic girlfriend.  On the eighth try I had the RPMs so high that when I finally managed to get the car in gear I gave us both a mild case of whiplash as we hit 30 MPH in about two seconds.  I then ran four "orange" lights on the way to the movie.

Eventually I learned to shift pretty smoothly but unfortunately my tutor had never said anything about down shifting.  A couple of months later my cousin Jeff was visiting me from Winston-Salem and we went out for a ride.  As we approached our first red light I engaged in my standard "throw it in neutral and slam the brakes while going from 50 to 0 in about 20 yards" braking maneuver.  From the passenger seat all I heard was "Jesus-Christ-slow-down-we’re-not-gonna-make-it!" and when we stopped right on the line I looked over with a kind of self-satisfied smirk.

Jeff, ghost white, spluttered "Haven’t you ever heard of down shifting?"

"What’s that?" I replied.

"Well, you go from 4th to 3rd and on down as you’re slowing down," he said incredulously.  "It helps save your brakes and it keeps you from scaring the crap out of everyone else."

"Oh, okay," I said. 

At the next light I came barreling to a stop as I shifted from fourth all the way to first gear without once letting out the clutch.  Jeff just kind of looked at me and started laughing.

"Man, you gotta let out the clutch to do any good!" he said in between guffaws.  "What kind of drivers ed do they have in Virginia anyway?"

That’s when I told him about my 1/2 hour lesson and he asked why my Mom didn’t hold out for more.  I told him I thought it was because she was in a state of shock since the guy wore really tight white jeans and you could see his striped bikini underwear.  Not that she was dazzled, just frazzled.

Anyway, that car became my home away from home my senior year.  To pay for gas I’d give guys rides to school in exchange for gas money. Eventually I had a regular crew of five guys, including my younger brother squeezed into what was charitably classified a "compact" car.  Since we went to a small private high school about 15 miles from our place I’d end up spending about an hour to an hour and a half getting to and from school every day.   I think those trips could be the material for a coming-of-age book or maybe a really bad teen-movie.

Usually my brother and I would leave the house around 6:30 in the morning and get home at around 6:30 in the evening since we both played sports throughout the school year and practice wasn’t over until 5:00.  I was always too tired, or lazy, to empty my clothes out of trunk of the car so every two weeks I’d have to take a big bag and stuff it with my clothes in order to do laundry.  To say that car was odiferous would be a vast understatement.

Those clothes came in handy one time when I lost my gas cap.  I rummaged through the hatch area and found an old sock, stuffed it in the tank opening, closed the little door over it and promptly forgot all about it.  The next day I volunteered to drive on a school trip to a Lutheran camp in the mountains (our school was Lutheran) where it was parked for two days in torrential rains.  On the way down the mountain my car sputtered and came to a stop in front of an old farm house.  When I couldn’t get it to turn over the residents of the house, who all looked like Cooter from Dukes of Hazzard, came out to give me a hand.  They correctly surmised that something was going on with my fuel line and when one of them went to check my gas tank he found my sopping sweatsock that had managed to funnel a whole bucket of rainwater into my tank.  Eventually they got me back on road with some stern advice about the proper use of knitwear in vehicles. Apparently there aren’t many, but as I said I’m not a car guy.

I drove that little beast for three years until Mom decided to sell it.  One summer morning while I was working an internship across the street from her office near Dupont Circle she arranged a meeting in her office parking garage with two Arab gentlemen who’d agreed to pay her a couple of thousand dollars cash.  She had me go with her as protection, which is laughable considering I weighed 160 pounds soaking wet at that time, and after our little imitation of the Deepthroat scene in All the President’s Men we promptly walked to the bank to deposit the cash.

At the time I was happy to see the Chocolate Beast go, but now I think of it more than a tad nostalgically.  It may have been my generation’s version of the Edsel but it was my first set of wheels. Now I’ve graduated all the way up to a five-speed Saturn, which in about a year will be what Michael, our oldest son will be driving.  Suffice it to say he’s going to get a lot more tutoring than his Dad did. 

It Has Begun

My daughter is playing on a Twin City Youth Soccer Association challenge level team this year after playing on a couple of Optimist rec league teams since our move to NC.  The big difference is that there are two practices a week plus at least one game and we will be traveling to play some games.  Rec league was one practice a week plus one game a week and all the games were played at the same field.

The other big difference for us this year is that I’ve volunteered to be an assistant coach on her team so we’ll be living and breathing soccer from now until next May with a brief respite during the winter.  So there won’t be any bumming rides for her to practice while we’re off doing other things.

The season started this past weekend with the TCYSA Classic Tournament which was held at the Sara Lee complex off of Shattalon Drive and the new BB&T complex in Davie County.  Something like 2,300 kids from all over NC (and a few from VA and WV) sweating their rear ends off on Friday, Saturday and Sunday.  Our girls played twice on Saturday, losing 2-1 in the morning and 5-4 in the afternoon, and then once on Sunday, tying our Twin City counterparts 1-1.  This followed two weeks of three practices each (M,T,TR) and a month of informal scrimmaging with the other Twin City girl teams in our age group.

Sounds like a lot, but it’s worth the price.  I figure this is my last chance to spend significant time with Erin before she goes from boy crazy to boy obsessed and then forgets who I am.  The way I look at it there aren’t many better ways to spend an evening or a weekend.

Oh, and as for the tournament the good news is that all of the parents and coaches at our three games behaved very well.  None of the nightmare little league parent behavior that’s becoming more and more common these days.  Hopefully that’s a good omen for the rest of the year.  The bad news is that our goalie dislocated her knee in the second half of our first game.  She seemed a lot better on Sunday (she watched the game from the bench) and we all hope she’ll be back on her feet in a week or two.

Want to Make a Fortune on Your Shipping & Handling Charges? Work With Uncle Sam

A couple of days ago I wrote about the increasingly popular online practice of selling things dirt cheap and then making money on the shipping and handling charges.  Well the online folks are a bunch of pikers compared to the small defense contractor based in South Carolina that, among other things, charged almost a $1 million to ship two $.19 washers to Texas.  The sister team running this company manages to make Cheney’s boys at Halliburton look like Boy Scouts.

Oh, and because these jokers got away with several of these S&H scams for years thanks to the Pentagon’s expedited payment system for items that were shipped under "priority" status, the Defense Logistics Agency and the Defense Finance and Accounting Service "have made major changes, including thorough evaluations of the highest shipping charges."  Good to know, huh?

links for 2007-08-16

Son, You’re 15 and It’s Time You Figured Out What You’re Doing for the Rest of Your Life

Cory Doctorow, sci-fi author, blogger and general king-geek, posts about the troubling development of US high schools asking freshmen to declare a "major".


Some US high-schools are forcing students to choose "majors" in the
ninth grade. This sounds similar to the UK system, where teens take O-
and A-levels and seal their post-secondary education choices at the age
of 15 or 16. Maybe this works for some kids, but it would have been a
disaster for me.

I have to agree with Cory on this one.  In eighth grade I took one of those aptitude tests that were so popular at the time and I was told that the best career choice for me was becoming a park ranger.  Anyone that knows me knows I’m not the "one-with-nature" type so that career path was a non-starter. 

To be honest I’m 40 years old and I still don’t know what I’m going to be when I grow up, so I can’t imagine asking my teenagers to figure out what they want to do their first year of high school.  What I do want them to do is learn, explore and try new things and not kill or seriously maim themselves in the process.  I figure we’ll have been successful if we look back 15 years from now and see that our kids found something in life that they’re passionate about, do it to the best of their ability and make a positive contribution to society in the process.

What I want my kids to see is that the learning process is what’s important, not the test grade.  Memorizing a math formula is worthless without learning how to apply it; memorizing historic dates is irrelevant without understanding the context of each historical event; learning to diagram a sentence is a waste of time if you don’t learn to communicate your thoughts and feelings with your writing.  I’m not saying that my kids shouldn’t learn the importance of working hard even when the subject is "boring", that’s as important to learn as the Pythagorean Theorem, but I am saying that they need to see that  learning in and of itself is a vital component of realizing their dreams, whatever they may be.  If their school asks them to decide in 9th grade whether they’re going to be an artist or a scientist then the school is doing them a supreme disservice.

The Day of Conception or The Day I’d Like to Visit Lenin’s Birthplace

The Russians have a problem in that they don’t produce enough offspring and they tend to die a lot younger  than they should, hence a declining population.  The folks in Ulyanovsk, Russia think they have the solution.  They’ve declared September 12 the Day of Conception and given couples time off from work to go and be fertile. 

It gets better.

On June 12, Russia’s national day, the proud parents who "give birth to a patriot" on that day win "money, car, refrigerators, and other prizes."  Now that’s what I call a Patriot Act! From the article:

Everyone who has a
baby in an Ulyanovsk hospital on Russia Day gets some kind of prize.
But the grand prize winners are couples judged to be the fittest
parents by a committee that deliberates for two weeks over the
selection.

The 2007
grand prize went to Irina and Andrei Kartuzov, who received a
UAZ-Patriot, an SUV made in Ulyanovsk. They told reporters they were
planning to have another child anyway when they heard about the
contest.

Irina Kartuzova had to have a Caesarian section to deliver the baby and it was scheduled for June 12.

The
selection committee chose the Kartuzovs from among the 78 couples
because of their “respectability” and “commendable parenting” of
their two older children, a spokesman for the governor said.

It’s not just the Ulyanovskovites who think they need to be aggressive in boosting the birthrate. In his state of the nation address last year Russian president Darth Vader Dick Cheney Vladimir Putin declared the declining population the most acute problem facing the country and announced a "broad effort to boost Russia’s birthrate, including cash incentives to families to have more than one child."

Ulyanovsk’s Governor, Sergei Morozov, added the fun twist in his region with the Day of Conception and the Russia Day bonuses, and it seems to be working.  Ulyanovsk’s birthrate is up 4.5% this year over the same time last year.

I’m thinking that we should all show our support for the Ulyanovskovites by participating on September 12.  We should take the day off and, you know, do what any good Ulyanovskovite would do.  Honey? 

links for 2007-08-15

Cool Way to Manage Information

Yesterday I wrote on my business blog about searchCrystal
and noted that I liked the graphical display of its search results.
Today I stumbled upon a couple of sites that deal with visual
information management.  First I came across VisualComplexity.com which is best explained by this description from the site’s "About" page:

VisualComplexity.com intends to be a unified resource
space for anyone interested in the visualization of complex networks.
The project’s main goal is to leverage a critical understanding of
different visualization methods, across a series of disciplines, as
diverse as Biology, Social Networks or the World Wide Web. I truly hope
this space can inspire, motivate and enlighten any person doing
research on this field.

From the VisualComplexity site I found TheBrain.com.
These guys have visual content management products, one for individuals
and the other for enterprises.  They describe their products this way:

 

TheBrain Technologies is the leading provider of visual content
management solutions. The company was founded in 1996 and has been
delivering award-winning information management solutions for over a
decade. By connecting people, processes, and information, TheBrain’s
products provide unparalleled context for smarter information discovery
and more informed decision-making.

      
 

TheBrain technology can be utilized on corporate intranets, desktops, and the Internet. Some
      applications include: customer care, project management, dynamic mind mapping, IT management and helpdesks,
      impact assessment, competitive intelligence, marketing and sales support, and personal information management.

       
 

TheBrain has two primary products: PersonalBrain for
        individual users and BrainEKP, an enterprise knowledge platform for group collaboration.

I’ve always struggled with content management.  In the physical
world I’m a "pile don’t file" kind of guy because when I file it I
forget about it.  (A happy compromise for me is binders; active
projects are organized in binders that I keep on my desk and then I
shelve the binders once the project is complete).  I’m constantly
hunting for files online because my folder systems tend to get too
complex and so I forget if I saved a file under "Taxes" or
"Accounting."  These products offer hope for folks like me.