Take a lot of Pictures: A Life Lesson from Photography

July 9th, 2008 by k8gu No comments »

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A few months ago, I bought a Nikon D40 digital SLR camera.  While most modern digital SLR cameras can be operated in a point-and-shoot mode, I have endeavored to learn how to use the camera.  I was completely unprepared for the quality and degrees of freedom that the SLR afforded me.  It has almost no shutter delay compared to my old point-and-shoot.  I can shoot in ambient light.  I still don’t know what half of the settings do.

I take a lot of pictures.  Most of them aren’t very good.  But, each one is another chance at a good one.  It is also more practice.  Thank goodness it’s digital!  I’d spend a small fortune developing the 1500-odd images I’ve taken so far.  Taking this approach to life seems somewhat Edisonian and backwards (work smarter, not harder, as the saying goes).  Try a lot of things (within reason).  One of them just might work.  If not, you’ll still learn something.

Keep on Flying: A Life Lesson from R/C

July 6th, 2008 by k8gu No comments »

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I’ve written several times about the airplane.  So, this story will repeat somewhat.  As a child, I was interested in R/C airplanes.  In a rare lapse of judgement, Dad bought a used “trainer” from a coworker.  However, since we’d been told that crashing is inevitable, he sold it.

Crashes are inevitable in R/C.  The only way to get better is to keep flying, keep crashing, and keep repairing.  Although most things in life are more robust than R/C airplanes, the ability to pick up the pieces and devise creative solutions after repeated setbacks is a valuable skill.

All That You Leave Behind: A Life Lesson from Pool

June 24th, 2008 by k8gu No comments »

Pool

Playing pool on Monday nights has become my latest hobby, also the second hobby I owe to my office-mate, Scott. I’m learning a lot very quickly. (This is pretty easy to do since I’m making a lot of mistakes.)

One of the first things I learned is that the most important thing about any shot it is how it impacts the position of the balls on the table, not just pocketing your balls.   What if we played every move in our lives like the impacts mattered?  Does the impact matter?  For me?  For my family?  For my friends?  For my community?  For my world?

Fascinating. I still stink at pool; but, I’ve learned something for life.

A Blog Series: Life Lessons from Hobbies

June 24th, 2008 by k8gu No comments »

Coincidentally, a few days ago, Jeff, KE9V, posted a blog on the demise of hobbies. Although, I’m not as gloomy as he is sometimes, I would tend to agree with most of his points. Hobbies are in decline among my generation and although I’m doing my best to support the statistics by having lots of them, it’s a shame. Hobbies bring people together and offer extensions of wisdom to the rest of life. I say that KE9V’s post was a coincidence because I was recently pondering the value of hobbies in my own life.

Now that I have enough photographs, the series begins. I will post a new blog every day or so, featuring a different hobby and one of the greatest lessons I’ve learned from that activity.

Will the real MV Island please stand up?

June 23rd, 2008 by k8gu No comments »

Again, I saw a status message, this time on AIM (AOL Instant Messenger) of someone whose geography did not match mine. “MV Island,” it said. “Why would they be going to Malyj Vysotskij Island?” I pondered. Ah, it’s Martha’s Vineyard.

Malyj Vysotskij is arguably more interesting…

Travel

May 29th, 2008 by k8gu No comments »

Travel

We’ve been on the road, in the air, and on the water a lot this Spring.  It’s often hard to know whether travel is a curse or a blessing.  We are fortunate.  But, it takes a toll.  Then, there’s the environmental cost…

Antenna work, completed and coming

May 8th, 2008 by k8gu No comments »

PL-259

I took K9BF’s TA-33jr down a few weeks ago because it didn’t look too secure and I wasn’t able to get it up high enough to play well on 20. I had entertained the thought of building an East/West-firing lazy-H array to replace it. But, that would have required me to move my high 40-meter dipole, probably the best antenna I’ve ever had for that band. I decided instead to build a Moxon, which seemed to be a fitting tribute to W4RNL, who recently became an SK.  The Moxon has about the same gain (albeit in one direction) over ground as the lazy-H and a little fatter beam.  It’s not yet operational; but, I’m working on it.

The 160-meter matching portion of the 80-meter dipole needs to be adjusted and repaired.  I didn’t use big enough RF chokes in the switching network and they got burnt.

I might do something to the southeast if I like the performance of the Moxon, too.  Hopefully, the beams will give me the edge I need to make some more QSOs on 20 in the Sprint and SS this Fall.

Grad school is really sapping my energy.  We’ve been on the road a lot and the end is not yet in sight!  Plus, there’s real work to be done, too.

Independent?

May 6th, 2008 by k8gu No comments »

My father-in-law is an avid reader of Consumer Reports.  He got us a subscription a while back.  I frequently let Sarah read and summarize new issues.  But, a new issue arrived today touting their latest computer evaluations.  I was compelled to read it.  By the way, the MacBook and the ThinkPad still top the list of laptops.  At least someone agrees with my sentiments there.

As the son of an physicist who used to do performance testing for a major home appliance manufacturer that was not always treated favorably by CR, I have a healthy skepticism for the reviews.  (It’s very easy to design experiments that favor certain outcomes.)  Although, they frequently tend to bear-out my own recommendations and choices upon things I consider myself an expert about.

But, I digress.  In the February 2008 issue, they spent some time on investments.  One of the investments they recommended avoiding was an annuity.  In the latest (June 2008) issue, an advertisement touts a “Consumer’s Union Annuity.”  I didn’t bother to read the details, though.  It seems that an investment in CR‘s parent company is fine, despite the earlier discouragement.  Ok, so this is a relatively minor inconsistency.  But, it never hurts to know what influence a buck has…

Repairing the micro Cluster

May 3rd, 2008 by k8gu No comments »

Airglow Cluster

Last summer, with the help of a fellow graduate student, I retrieved some old computers from the dorms to build a small cluster.  Total cost: $100.  Five of the machines had Maxtor DiamondMax 8 40-gB drives in them.  All five failed over the past few months.  For $200, I could replace them with new drives.  But, first I called surplus and ended up with a smattering of used drives with capacities of 20 and 40 gB. Three hours later, we were up and running again.  I’m sure they’ll get plenty of use as the ISEA deadline closes in…

Cali?

May 1st, 2008 by k8gu No comments »


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I noticed in Facebook that one of my “friends” had the following status message: [Name] is freaking out because I’ll be in Cali in less that [sic] 24 hours!!!!!

Cali? I’d be freaking-out, too. Wait. She means California, not the city in southern Colombia. Seriously, that’s the first thing that came to my mind…