via Tech Support Comedy…
Blondestar (mp3)
via Tech Support Comedy…
Blondestar (mp3)
You know that if Lil’ takes it and then Mari takes it that I’m very likely to take it too. So, according to the Jenny Turpish Slapped Me quiz… and if that’s not the oddest name for a quiz yet, I clearly need to get out more…
Wackiness: 44/100
Rationality: 44/100
Constructiveness: 74/100
Leadership: 28/100You are an SECF—Sober Emotional Constructive Follower. This makes you a hippie. You are passionate about your causes and steadfast in your commitments. Once you’ve made up your mind, no one can convince you otherwise. Your politics are left-leaning, and your lifestyle choices decidedly temperate and chaste.
You do tremendous work when focused, but usually you operate somewhat distracted. You blow hot and cold, and while you normally endeavor on the side of goodness and truth, you have a massive mean streak which is not to be taken lightly. You don’t get mad, you get even.
Please don’t get even with this web site.
Er, okay. Can I try that again, please?
Wackiness: 44/100
Rationality: 38/100
Constructiveness: 72/100
Leadership: 28/100You are an SECF—Sober Emotional Constructive Follower. This makes you a hippie. You are passionate about…
Blah blah blah, okay, whatever.
Weirdo quiz. *sigh*
I rolled out of bed much like usual… late and groggy. I made it to work on time, fueled only by a toasted english muffin.
And was promptly hauled down the street for a “little cleaning project.”
You see, the Promotions department(s) clean out their storage sheds about every two years. This involves calling in a dumpster, usually, and this time was certainly no exception. Fired up with inspiration, my boss decided that we, the Engineering department, should also clean out our storage sheds. Woo hoo, fun!
Hurricane (the “remotes guy”) and I hauled stuff out of both Engineering units all morning and a bit into the afternoon, aided by a number of Promotions interns from 94/7fm. We even took the time to sweep the floors and reorganize things a bit.
Did I mention we ended up calling in two more additional dumpsters?
Still, it was not quite the kind of work I’m used to. I’m home now, covered in dust and dirt and sweat, sore in various odd places, and more than a bit groggy. I don’t regret it, though… I can tell my body needed the exercise, and I managed not to overextert myself. (Well, the truth of that will be told in the morning by how sore my back is. Hmm.)
This sort of thing is most definitely not in my job description…
I finally assembled all of the spare parts. Motherboards, processors, RAM, hard drives, power supplies, video cards. Somewhere in all of that silicon and plastic would be the genesis of a new, albeit clunky and kludgy, Linux-based home computer.
Alas, it was not meant to be. After hours of testing, only one combination of CPU, motherboard, power supply and video card would achieve anything more than the barest sign of functioning… and not one combination would even POST. Argh.
I ranted in frustration for a short while, and then I decided to turn my attention to something else geeky, something almost equally worthwhile.
I attached the cassette deck to my new receiver!
And that didn’t work out very well, actually. It turns out that, according to the manual for my Panasonic A/V receiver, one cannot record audio or video from one analog source to another. Helluva “feature” if you ask me, but that’s okay. I worked around it through the simple expedient of attaching the tape deck directly to the computer.
The roomie and I then spent a happy few hours combing through our respective cassette collections and pulling off songs we’d long been yearning to have in digital form. He went for an XTC song and a few tracks from a band I’d never even heard of (the name of which now escapes my recall), and I plucked B-sides off a couple of “cassingles” in addition to a couple of stand-out tracks on otherwise-forgettable albums. (Let’s face it, David Gilmour’s old solo album really only has one good song on it.)
I love that living-room PC, lemme tell ya. Not only does it make a great myHTPC platform (all the better to watch anime with), but thanks to the LiveDrive hardware and CoolEdit 2000 software I was able to pull in audio from those old tapes and clean it up in a jiffy.
The results speak, as it were, for themselves. So, who wants a copy of a B-side track from the Anderson Bruford Wakeman Howe album released back in ‘89?
Let’s get one thing straight at the outset, here: I’m nobody’s idea of a perfect boyfriend. I have communication issues (which I’m working on), I have fears (not to mention a certain level of paranoia), and I can be incredibly awkward physically, verbally and socially.
One of the results of being afraid and having communication issues is that I don’t react well to crises. In fact, I’ve been known to go way, way out of my way to avoid anything resembling conflict… much to the eventual detriment of my marriage. I could, in fact, be considered a past master of the passive-aggressive school of behaviour.
As I’ve said before, though, life’s too short. For instance, it’s too short to limp along in the bad old way when there are simple, manageable changes one can make to improve things.
The first change was to set aside my fear of conflict. I had to suck up and do the right thing a year or so ago, even though it terrified me. (And I won’t claim I did everything right, or everything I could or should have done. That’s a subject I have no wish to revisit, however, thank you.) I’m still scared of strong negative emotions, though, so I still briefly lose my nerve and my ability to focus during moments of crisis. (My son will undoubtedly sympathize with this statement.) But I get through them, usually by stepping back a bit and remembering to breathe… eventually…
Dawn and I have a wonderful and somewhat quirky relationship. Because we share a weird synchronicity (common dialogue: “Get off my brainwave!” “Never, bwahahaha!”) we sometimes get too comfortable in the mindset that we each know what the other is thinking and feeling all the time. Obviously, this blows up in our faces occasionally, causing a tiff of some sort. Half the time I feel utterly helpless and miserable, the other half I feel indignant. I’m learning to get a handle on both reactions, now. It probably helps that I’m realizing that an argument doesn’t mean the impending end of the relationship. As long as we’re still able to talk it out afterward, everything will work out well enough.
Probably the hardest part, for me, is being able to step back and look at both of our words and actions with more objectivity. I’m just as prone to claiming all of the blame for myself as I am to lay it all at someone else’s feet, so trying to be fair and balanced is the key. I’m getting better but I know I have a lot of work left to do. Luckily for us both, we’re both so intensely committed to making this relationship work that we don’t let disagreements simmer any longer than absolutely necessary. (Anymore, that is. Heh.)
Could learning these lessons have saved my marriage? I don’t know, and to be completely honest I don’t want to speculate on it very much. It’s far, far too late now to do anything but move forward, taking with me the best of what came before and discarding the things that sabotaged that relationship.
Anyway. These are the small building blocks, the new skills I’m working on a little bit at a time, every time: Objectivity, compassion, conquering my fears, finding ways to say what I mean without being denigrating, dealing with problems without major delay (if possible), and of course making sure that everyone knows anything of importance that may affect them directly or the relationship in general.
It seems like a lot, but it’s actually just a lot of small and simple things. The overriding skill, the one single hardest thing to do, is being strong enough to force myself to do what’s right, which means doing all of these small simple things.
Or does that only make sense to me? In the words of Paul Simon (singer, not politician), “Maybe I think too much.”
Dear $VENDOR,
I understand your urge to design (and continually redesign) the innards of a desktop computer in such a way as to make them a) more easily accessible than usual, b) more efficiently cooled, c) able to fit more hardware in less space or d) all of the preceeding letters.
It’s option “e” I take exception to. That would be, e) unable to have anything other than vendor-supplied parts for replacements.
What really lit my fire this afternoon was the discovery that I can’t even replace a burned-out power supply in what looks like an otherwise-standard desktop mini-tower. Oh, no, that would be too easy. Sure, it was fairly easy to get to the unit. But there isn’t a standard power supply made that will fit into this chassis. Why? Because of the extra-special slot-based retention system you came up with. Nevermind that 99.9% of desktop power supplies are perfectly capable of staying put with the four screws usually used for such a task. Oh, no, you guys had to be different. “Let’s use only one screw, and some tab/slot dealie-bobs!” Great effing idea.
Did I mention that of the parts inside your average computer, the power supply is second on the list of Most Likely Bits To Fail? (The top item is, of course, “box containing flat round hunks of metal covered in magnetic bits spinning at very high rotational speeds.” Otherwise known as a “hard drive.”)
So if you have a situation like I did today, where one of my better salesfolks’ power supplies blew a capacitor, and I find I’m unable to replace the power supply from any of my numerous available stock… what am I supposed to do with the rest of the computer? I’ll be damned if I’m going to pay through the nose for a special $VENDOR-made power supply, thank you very little.
Consider this one more nail in the coffin of my ever being able to recommend your products with anything resembling my former enthusiasm, you braindead bastards.
I guess it’s time to gut this tower for parts, eh? Let’s see… 550 MHz Pentium-III CPU, 64 MB of RAM, and a ten gigabyte hard drive. Whee. What a freakin’ waste.