7.223 walking, viewing

Sunday 07/12/2026

In the morning, after watering the plants and doing the NYT puzzle, I decided I wanted coffee and a pastry. Where? How about the Palo Alto Cafe in Midtown. That’s 1.7 miles, so instead of walking there, I took the #21 bus. I love that I can ride the bus with my Clipper Card for $1 each trip.

Had a nice coffee and sit, then, because the Transit App showed the bus as 25 minutes away, I walked back.

After lunch, Joanne and I walked over to the Arts Center (another 1.5 miles each way) to view the annual Clay and Glass festival, a couple of acres of booths with ceramic and glass artisans showing their stuff. Didn’t see anything that made me want to buy.

That was about it for the day. Did some reading and stuff.

7.222 walk, test, concert

Saturday 07/11/2026

Took a walk over to Zoe for coffee, then back through the farmers market. Spent the rest of the morning catching up on podcasts and reading. After lunch and a nap, I put a couple of hours into a beta test.

I was looking for a Mac app that would let me edit the metadata of my thousands of image files. Back in the day, I managed those files using the app called Adobe Bridge, and with Bridge I had painstakingly added titles and keywords and location info to, if not all, at least hundreds of slides.

I’d like to search on and edit those fields, for instance find all the pics with the keyword “statue” or “Marian”, or add info. Adobe Bridge is long gone, absorbed into Adobe’s giant subscription-only package deal. So I tried an app off the Apple App Store. It didn’t do what I wanted so I wrote a critical review, and the developer contacted me and asked if I would like to be a beta tester for the next release, which would have at least some of what I wanted. Sure. So last week I got an email, and installed the official Apple beta test app TestFlight, and today I finally got around to trying out the updated version. I gave them a bunch of constructive friendly feedback. We’ll see what happens.

At 5:30 I met up with Joanne and we walked to Rinconada Park carrying our new camp chairs, that we bought at REI some months ago and haven’t yet used. This was for one of the city’s Twilight Concert series. Tonight it was by an ABBA cover band. I thought I would recognize a lot of tunes but it turns out I didn’t know ABBA’s music all that well. So couldn’t sing along very much. “Take a chance on me,” I knew that chorus.

7.221 a day of not much

Friday 07/10/2026

Walked with Joanne in the morning, up to Town&Country for coffee and a Trader Joe’s stop. Not sure how I frittered away the rest of the day. Well, I spent a couple hours puttering with Python code again. Spent an hour reading.

At 7pm we had the monthly sing-along. Three residents, Jerry, Kay and Arlene, put this together, and do a terrific job. Joanne has a part in it too: she has taken on the job of rearranging all the chairs in the lobby to make a theater arrangement. Which is quite a feat, considering she weighs less than some of the larger chairs that she shoves around on a large carpeted floor. (So why don’t you help, you oaf? Because she doesn’t want help thanksverymuch.)

7.220 medical, coding, lecture

Thursday 07/09/2026

This morning at 10 I had a routine 4-month checkup with my new PCP, Dr. Chu. I’m sure I mentioned last year how I had signed up with a “concierge” medical group; and I’m sure I’ve mentioned seeing him before but I’m too lazy to look it up. Anyway, 4-month routine visits are part of the service. We talked about various minor problems I have, none really worth acting on.

For a couple of hours later in the day I continued working on coding. This started when I stumbled on this blog post, which makes the whole business of interacting with an AI through its API so much clearer. I have got my version of his agent up almost to where it can use a tool, but he throws in a twist there and I need to rearrange my central loop.

After supper, Joanne came by and we watched the third lecture in the Great Courses series on Music and Mathematics. What a couple of nerds, huh?

7.219 medical, hike, meeting, event

Wednesday 07/08/2026

Out the door at 7:20 to walk to an appointment at PAMF, 8am for a routine dermatology skin inspection. Couple of little bits ro burn off of my left ear and temple, but no other peculiar spots on my skin.

Then I got some coffee, and went an loitered on the corner of Homer and Emerson until the hiking party, in Joanne L’s Hyundai, picked me up. We drove to Wunderlich park and did that loop, about 4 miles and 600′ elevation change. Oh my I see I have racked up an impressive 5.6 miles and 14K steps today. No wonder I was tired and sore. Ate lunch with Joanne, then took and ibuprofen and pretty much napped the afternoon away.

Today, 2nd Wednesday, was 6th floor meeting day. This one was attended by our newest neighbors, just moving in, Soren and Gladys. Soren was a software person at Sun Microsystems, about the time I was at Silicon Graphics, Sun’s major competitor.

Dinner with the 6th floor gang. Oddly this was one of the rare clangers Dining Services puts out. Terrible meal. Anyway next up was a talk by a Stanford professor, Buzz Thompson, on the water problems of California and the West generally. I was running the AV, and Buzz about wore my fingers out. Normally speakers stay pretty much put behind the podium, but this guy was perpetually walking from one side of the stage to the other, so I am trying to track him with the camera for the benefit of a dozen people watching on Zoom. 40 minutes of panning back and forth. Oh well.

7.218 meetings mostly

Tuesday 07/07/2026

For the writers meeting, with a prompt of “forgiveness”, I threw together something to read between 10 and 10:30. There were about 3 really well-written pieces, little homilies on the damage that resentment does. At the end I did a little presentation.

In the writers group, someone has the responsibility of coming up with a prompt each week, for the next week. Sometimes that is hard to do. Joanne had proposed that the writers group maintain a “prompt bank”, a list of good writing prompts that people could add to whenever they thought of one, or withdraw one when it was their turn and they drew a blank. But how to implement it?

There are basically two ways. Old school: someone volunteers to be the prompt banker, keeps the document, takes submissions and gives out prompts, via email. Or, I had found out about collaborative editing: a document that lives in the cloud and anybody who has the URL for it, can open it and copy or edit it. I demonstrated that right there: I shared my screen with the document open, and Joanne and Peter also had it open and each of them added a sentence to the document, their keystrokes appearing on my screen in real time. That way, nobody has to be the volunteer prompt bank holder.

So there was a little discussion and they opted to do it the old school way. No skin off my nose, I was just demoing the possibility.

After lunch there was line dance class. After that I joined a meeting of the AI interest group to hear from Rhonda. She had attended an invite-only banquet held by Stanford’s robotics school or department or whatever it is, and told us about what she had learned. Which was some interesting things happening that Channing House might get involved in.

I didn’t say there, but will opine here, that I have been highly un-impressed by progress in robotics. It has kind of gotten a tail wind from all the AI hype, and certainly AI progress will have a lot to do with future robots. But there is nothing on the market or near it that could be a practical aide to a nurse in a care facility. They are nowhere close to machine that can make a bed or administer a med. I’ve seen a demo of a robot that could fold laundry. It was fixed mounted to a table, but if you brought a basket of laundry close, it could fold the flatware into a pile. Whoopee-do. The little Chinese made robot dogs are around, I saw one at CHM a year ago, and another on University avenue last week. They walk and run very well, even on stairs. But they couldn’t bring you a beer.

Stanford wants to try having a robot act as a walking companion to a senior person. I’m dubious anything useful will come of that, either. But I’m just an old grouch.

Tonight the movie committee showed Stand By Me. I started watching it and it made me very uncomfortable. Rob Reiner did a great job of recreating exactly how my high-school peers talked and acted. I made me nervous. Plus I have seen it once, probably in 1986 when it came out, and I remember the ending was scary as well. So I left, about 20 minutes in.

7.217 fopal, walk, meeting

Monday 07/06/2026

Got an early start, was at FOPAL by 8, and had my section in good shape for the sale weekend by 10:30. Came home in time to listen to a book talk, professor Patnode talking about Sylvia Plath and The Bell Jar. So tragic.

Had lunch, and about 2, J and I walked down to Edgewood market, just for the steps (10,591, 4.4 mi). Back just in time for the 4pm meeting of Poetry Out Loud. My choice to read was Pablo Neruda’s “We Are Many”.

That was it, full busy day.

7.216 docent, tv

Sunday 07/05/2026

Quiet Sunday morning. I was supposed to have a rehearsal with Sandy at 11, but she forgot. We rescheduled.

At 1 I left for the Museum to lead the 2pm tour. Good tour, 25 people, nice hand at the end.

Helped Tom get set up to show the second half of that dumb 1776 movie. Did not stay to watch. Instead, Joanne and I watched the final chapter of Riot Women off Prime/Britbox. That was a fun show.

7.215 bbq, gardening, tech, party

Saturday 07/04/2026

Started with a walk to cafe Zoe, coming back via University to deposit a check and walk through the farmers market.

Met with Joanne and Carolyn to eat at the CH barbecue, big serving line in the outside patio, then eat inside at a table.

In the afternoon I was in my bedroom fooling around with the guitar and glanced out the window and whoa! A plant that had been on a plant stand, had fallen off and the pot had smashed on the cement deck. This was a Plectranthus, grown from a cutting given me by Linda across the hall, and up to a huge and thriving bush of dark green leaves. It was in my prettiest pot, one that Marian had been fond of, which was now in pieces; and the plant was on its side with a root ball the size of a melon in the debris.

So I repotted it into an even bigger pot, and it’ll be fine I bet. Cleaned up the mess, mourned the pretty pot.

At 6:30 I went down and mentored Alice as she set up to show a movie. The party planners had decided that we really needed to see the movie 1776. Being 2:25 minutes long, they said to split it up and show half tonight and half tomorrow. Which was a last-minute PITA to the AV group. We had to find two volunteers to run the movie. I took advantage to make it a chance to up-skill two people who hadn’t run DVD showings before. Alice tonight, Tom tomorrow night. I didn’t stay around to watch after the first 5 minutes. Came back an hour later to help Alice shut down.

Then it was time to go up to 11 for the proper party, root beer floats and firework watching. Nature cooperated, providing a nice sunset.

Nice party as well. Too chilly to stand out watching the distant fireworks around the bay.

7.214 gardening, coding

Friday 07/03/2026

Took the usual muffin walk with Joanne. On return, I did some gardening, planting out cuttings. One was a cutting from a nice begonia we saw walking through Town & Country; I just stole a little sprig and put it in my shopping bag. The other two were cuttings from the old dragon-wing begonias. I had divided those a year ago, and the divided plants have stayed alive but just don’t seem to thrive. So I thought I would try a complete restart of them from cuttings. Cross your fingers. A few months will tell.

Then I spent a couple of hours coding, following on from what I did a couple days ago. What I ended up with was a little program that is a complete chatbot. It prompts for a query, passes it to Claude, and displays the answer. From this exercise I learned something new. While you in a “chat”, all of your questions, and all of the bot’s responses, are being collected, and each time you hit Enter, the whole conversation, from the start, is passed to the bot.

This is what “context” actually means: the entire script of the conversation up to that point, questions and answers both, is passed in. When you start a new chat, that starts a new context. But as long as you continue a chat, the context gets longer and longer. Which is “tokens” of input and output to be charged.