4.199 fruit, AV and more AV

Sunday 06/18/2023

Usual Sunday morning habitual activities. Then I spent half an hour pitting cherries and sectioning apricots for a nice fruit compote.

Next up, a pending project in the A/V world. We’ve had requests from certain performers to have monitor speakers, speakers on stage pointing at the performer, so they get a direct hit with the sound they are making. We have a couple of powered speakers that could be used this way, but we have lacked the cables to get audio from the sound board to them. Also actually working out how to do it. A week ago I ordered the cables from Amazon. Today I wanted to try it out, so I did. And I wrote up my results in a poop sheet for my A/V team. I’m kind of proud of it and I will stick it at the end.

Lunch today was fairly spectacular, they laid on three entrees, and wine, and a pick your own dessert table. Dinner of course was to be a sack lunch.

At 3:30 it was time to go set up for Pru’s talk in the Sunday@Home series. She talked about her self-published book and the process of self-publishing. My main concern was that my team member Kass was being the zoom host. We worked through my 3 page checklist and everything worked fine. I hope her confidence is up. Next month maybe she can do one alone.

Only ten of us gathered for the sack supper picnic, various people being away. My compote was favorably received. I still have quite a bit of it left, however, to eat on my own.


4.198 fruit, a/v

Saturday 06/17/2023

My big toe is very nearly back to normal. I took a walk over to the farmers market. Tomorrow will be another picnic supper day, when the dining services crew prepare brown-bag meals to be picked up after lunch, and leave early. On the 6th floor, most people meet in the floor dining room at 5:30 for a group picnic. Last year (I think it was) I prepared a bowl of pitted cherries for one of these occasions. I think I will do the same, since the market is full of delicious looking ripe fruit. I got cherries, apricots, and seedless mandarins. Tomorrow I will do that.

At noon I went up to 11 and set up the sound system for a meeting. The presenter, who turned out to be a professor of engineering, had already connected his laptop to the TV, so I didn’t have to help with that. Love “helping” techy people.

Spent the afternoon preparing the video recording of the drama scenes show. I described this on Wednesday. 40 minute show of a short scenes, extracts from various plays and movies. I had video’d both performances but in the end I only used the evening show. Split out each scene with a little flip-flop video transition between them. It looks ok.

I also made a start at collecting the videos for the C&W event planned for September, now the committee has selected what they promise is the “final” list of numbers. Lots of time to work on that.

4.197 AV Day

Friday 06/16/2023

Today was the big day for the drama crew that rehearsed last Wednesday. Two performances, 10am and 7:30pm. I set them up with microphones and I recorded the video of both performances. So that was a good part of the day.

In the middle, before lunch, I walked over to the Apple store and purchased a Lightning to HDMI adapter. This because we have a request from Mary Ann, who wants to hold a party on the 11th floor, and have her kids show photos from an iPhone on the big TV. The big TV is set up for that. I prepared detailed instructions, although simple, clear, and illustrated with photos, on how to turn the TV on, how to watch Comcast video, Roku video, play DVDs, or connect any device to HDMI input. Only problem, iPhones don’t have HDMI, you need an adapter. It’s a little thing. I tucked it into the pocket in the back of the instruction binder. It has “Please return when done” written both sides of it in indelible sharpie. Wonder how long it will last…

Also, at 3:30, we had a request to set up the portable speaker and microphone on the patio outside the dining room. This was because the 7th floor was conducting the monthly TGIF party in that location. They didn’t have many announcements to make but they needed a mic for the one, which was for John to be surprised by his wife Francis celebrating his 80th birthday. So I rolled the portable speaker out there at 3:30 and rolled it back and put it away at 5.

So a busy day of AV tech, and there’s another event tomorrow and one on Sunday.

4.196 tech, fopal

Thursday 06/15/2023

I had to call off going to Shustek today because of an AV thing. In theory, all resident run events are scheduled a month in advance. There’s a process, an online form that gets filled out, so the event will be on the monthly calendar, and so the A/V team will know about it and schedule somebody at our month-end meeting to do the tech. So this event, a memorial, excuse me celebration of life, for a recently deceased resident, got scheduled late and owing to some errors (not by me) the notification didn’t get to me until the end of last week. And nobody was available to do it. So I am the AV of last resort, and I canceled going to Shustek to turn on the mics and tv for this 1pm event.

Did the gym round in the morning. My big toe is better, still a bit tender but I can walk without limping. Anyway, got the event going. Then what to do with the rest of the day? I got in the car and went first to the hardware store where I got some CA glue which I needed, and also a new bottle of Tide, ditto. Then to FOPAL where there were three boxes of computer books, out of which nearly a dozen turned out to be “high value” i.e. over $25. So yay.

The CA glue? Silly thing. Way back in 2020 when we were all eating in our rooms, Dining Services (then Sodexo) offered everybody their own salt and pepper shakers. Plastic ones. I kept mine on my dining table and over the 2+ years since, it has gotten nearly empty. So I thought I would replace it. A couple days ago I went by the grocery store and in the spice area they had little salt&pepper sets, made of cardboard, $4.69. But down below, they had 16-oz Morton’s salt containers, $2.40. Well, hell, thinks I, I will get a lifetime supply and be able to refill my plastic shaker 30, 40 times for half the price of one.

Got home and went to pry the bottom off the plastic shaker and, oh dear. It didn’t snap in or screw in; it was glued in. The plastic shaker was never meant to be refilled. Well ok I will refill it and glue it back. So I put masking tape over the holes in the top, and fill it up, and try to glue in the base using model car glue. Nope, it wouldn’t hold on this kind of plastic. Only answer obvs. was CA (“super”) glue. So I got that today and completed the repair. Ready for another couple years of eating in my room.

4.195 laundry, tech, meeting

Wednesday 06/14/2023

First thing I got the laundry going. My left foot was still too painful for a long walk. The rest of the day was mostly A/V tech in various forms. First off, I updated and modified my checklist for running a hybrid zoom event, and sent a copy to Kass who is going to assist me — she doesn’t know it but she’s going to run it with my assistance, heh heh — running the Sunday @ Home this coming Sunday. And scheduled that in the zoom room software.

In scheduling it I found the recording files of a speaker from last week, and that needed to be taken care of. By which I mean, the 5GB of recordings have to be downloaded and deleted from the Zoom cloud storage, so that it won’t interrupt us in the middle of an event and say, sorry, your cloud quota is full, I’m stopping the recording. Like it did once.

But then with the files downloaded it needs to be put together into a video. There are two files, one of the camera on the speaker, and the second file just her slides, of which she had a lot. I put these two together in iMovie, and edit it so it shows each slide briefly when she mentions it, and then goes back to the speaker until the next slide. It’s not difficult but a little tedious. I had that about half done at 12 when it was time to go set up for the next thing.

That was the Channing House Players dress rehearsal. About 8 of my neighbors have been taking weekly classes from Sinjin Jones, who is the artistic director of the Pear Theater. They have worked up a series of short scenes, a program of about 35 minutes in all, to be presented twice this Friday. This was the first time they would rehearse with mics on. Our nice little over-the-ear personal mics. Also I wanted to practice recording the performance. So that all took about 2 hours.

Then I went back to my room and finished editing the speaker video and sent it off to Lenny to upload to Vimeo.

At 5 we had our monthly floor meeting. No exciting news there. And all went to dinner together.

4.194 meeting, tech

Tuesday 06/13/2023

Did the gym round in the morning. At 10:45 we had the usual writers meeting. The cue this time was, if you had your life to live over. I had nothing to say. Others did, quite heartfelt and poignant recollections, like, wouldn’t have married that guy. So it goes.

My left big toe is still gouty. I tried to go for a walk in the afternoon but had to turn back after four blocks; too painful and too slow.

I took a tech squad call, to a guy whose grasp on things is maybe getting a little shaky? He clicked on something he shouldn’t have, and got infected with something that makes these little pop-up ads keep appearing at random times offering penis enlargers or offers to repair his mac. I looked at it a couple weeks ago and didn’t fix anything. This time I had done some research on malware scanners for Macs. Afterward I wrote up the tech report:

“A very successful session. Main achievement was, I downloaded the Bitdefender free malware scanner from the app store and ran it. The scan took 30 minutes and deleted a couple dozen items. I think probably his little pop-up porn ads are now gone. We will see.

“He had dug up an old iPhone 6 from a drawer and wanted to verify it worked. It does work, he dialed his house phone and it rang. We played some residual voice mails, two were robocalls but one was from someone he knew.

“He had a number of texts piled up, and we practiced deleting them. I think it very likely that he won’t remember how to do any of this stuff tomorrow, but at least he will likely remember that there does exist some way to read and delete texts and voicemails.

“He was curious about QR codes, especially how they are used as tickets. Apparently someone took him to a ball game lately and showed a QR code on the phone as their ticket. I said, yes, I did exactly that to attend the Stanford game yesterday. So how do you get them? That led to a discussion of the Apple Wallet app. Then we put his main credit card into his Apple Wallet and talked about how he could now pay for a latte at Peets with the phone.

“That led to me asking, wait, it will ask for touch id, does it know your fingerprint? So we verified that his finger does work to unlock the phone. At some time in the past he had trained that phone to his fingerprint.

“He asked which of the many little app icons on the phone I use, and I mentioned Lyft. Then he wanted to get Lyft working. So I used his iMac to go to Lyft.com (the virus scanner was still plugging away) and it asks for your phone#. When I put in the number of his iPhone, it said, “Is that you, Joseph?” So he has had a Lyft account for some time. Which he didn’t remember getting.

“Then Lyft asks for his email. It doesn’t recognize his current email. I ask, did you ever have a different email. Yes, years ago. I put in that years-ago email and bingo, now Lyft knows him. So I edit his Lyft account to show his current email, and his current credit card number.

“So in principle he is set up to use Lyft. I would not expect him to be able to actually use the Lyft app without guidance, but the mechanism is there.”

Such is tech squad life.

4.193 meeting, fopal

Monday 06/12/2023

Have a bit of gout in my left big toe, limping all day. At 9am it was time for the Resident Association meeting. David G did his usual good job of running a hybrid zoom meeting. There were maybe 60 people in the auditorium, and he reported, 40 on zoom. In the open discussion period, David G vented about how so many people like to watch on zoom “in their jammies” instead of coming to the real meeting. This provoked quite a bit of discussion on email later in the day.

Drove down to FOPAL and did the usual post-sale triage, sending all the books in my section that had survived four sale days, to the bargain room.

Hacked a little at the novel. Geez, fiction is hard. I remember when I discovered that for the first time, about 1985, when I spent a year trying to be a professional fiction writer. As various people have said in various words, writing is easy, you just sit down at a keyboard and open a vein.

4.192 docent

Sunday 06/11/2023

Nothing much today. At 11 I went down to the museum and led the noon public tour. About 15 people. They were appreciative. One guy in particular buttonholed me after and said he found my talk fascinating. Nice.

I could have gone to the Stanford baseball game but did not, still pissed at them giving the game away last night. I’m watching it instead on ESPN2, where I see that in the 6th Stanford is up 5-2, exactly like last night. We’ll see if they can hold it this time.

Oh, I tried out that briliant idea I had during the game yesterday, to improve the novel. It wasn’t brilliant after all, didn’t work.

4.191 baseball, travel

Saturday 06/10/2023

In the morning I walked out to the farmers market and indulged myself, buying a few of what smelled like ripe apricots, a couple of seedless mandarin oranges, a gigantic bran muffin and my favorite, a chocolate hazelnut swirl. Toted all those back and ate portions of each for lunch. (The apricots were only so-so but possibly with a couple of days they may get better.)

Then off to the baseball, this is a “super regional” between Texas and Stanford to see which will go to the CWS. Stanford screwed the pooch. They were cruising along nicely going into the ninth inning leading 5-2. Noticing a few people heading for the exits, I said to the person next to me, “If this was the majors, I’d leave too. But this is the college game and anything can happen.” Stanford proceeded to prove me right. All they had to do was get three outs in the top of the ninth for the win. Instead by some poor pitching and a nightmarish dropped ball in the outfield, they let Texas plate five runs. Then they went down 1-2-3 in the bottom of the ninth, losing 5-7.

Plus, despite using the 20-second pitch clock, it still took 3:30 to play a nine-inning game, and by the time I got home, the dining room was closing. Which was not a problem because I still had all my market goodies, plus the rest of the ciabatta loaf from yesterday.

During the boring moments of the game I was writing bits of dialog for the novel on my phone, and got a hot flash of how to make a dramatic improvement. I think. I will explore tht idea tomorrow. So the game wasn’t a total loss, although it confirmed for me that I will not renew my Stanford baseball season tix next year.

Back home I’m looking at various of the Youtube video channels I follow; one is a guy building a boat in Port Townsend WA. And he was promoting the annual wooden boat festival there in September, the weekend of 9/8-10. And it sounded neat and I decided dang it, I haven’t gone anywhere in three years, I’m going to that. So I did the familiar travel booking round that I haven’t done since 2020, securing a hotel, a rental car, and a flight. Just went ahead and did it, before I could have too many second thoughts.

4.190 fried ay

Friday 06/09/2023

No actual fries were harmed in the filming of this day. I went for the standard walk. Intending to have a cup ‘n a cake at the end, but there was a long line at Verve and none of the other places appealed so I didn’t. So I was watching a YT video and someone on it was having a fresh loaf of bread for supper and I said, yes! that’s lunch!. So back out in the car this time to pick up a few things including a fresh ciabatta loaf from Whole Foods. Also a little melon and some apricots. The apricots were disappointing, and I tossed them, but the melon was tasty and I ate it with about a third of the loaf and butter.

Supper was also in my room. Yesterday’s supper had among its 3 entrees, liver and onions. I was sitting with three neighbors, Edie, Joanne and Sherri. I said, oh boy liver and onions. Edie and Joanne simultaneously wrinkled their noses and said eewwww. Sherri said oh, yeah, that’s what I’m having. So it was 50-50 liver lovers and haters. Anyway the portion was quite large and I didn’t finish so I brought it home in a box and that was supper today. A liver sandwich. I chopped that chunk of liver fine on my cutting board with my chef’s knife, which except for cutting the ciabatta earlier had been in the drawer for months, and made a sandwich with lots of mayo and sriracha sauce for zing and pickle slices. And a beer and the remaining half of the melon. So that was two gourmet meals.

Put in a little work on the novel. Got some difficult dialog that I’ve been stalled on for a couple days, done. This was the chatter among HS students on a bus, speculating ignorantly about the possible alien vessel that’s in the news. I had ChatGPT write some dialog a couple of days ago. What I wrote today is nothing like what the chatbot wrote. But a lot more pungent. Because people tell me that students these days say “fuck” a lot, like really, a lot. ChatGPT didn’t use a single swear word of any kind.