4.022 jean, swbb, tech

Friday 12/23/2022

After a morning walk, I sat down to try out the package of genealogical info that Jean wants to give to all her relatives. And it doesn’t work. The reason is, what she wants to pass on is a “family file” managed by the fairly well-known genealogy app, Reunion. People who get this package won’t have Reunion, so she’s included a copy of the app on the thumb-drive. Unfortunately when you launch it, Reunion looks around for a license, which costs $99. When you don’t have one, it runs in “demo mode”, and in demo mode it won’t open a family file with more than 50 people in it. Jean’s laboriously constructed family file probably contains a couple of hundred names, and Reunion in demo mode just won’t open it.

I made a couple of suggestions to her on what she can do, and she has my sympathy.

At 11 it was time to leave for a SWBB game. This was the first game of the PAC-12 season, and it was against Cal. In the carpool we were all complaining about the weird scheduling. Why would they start the season, and in particular against Cal, at a time when there are no students on campus? The audience was quite small. The team played well and won by 25.

At 5pm I helped neighbor Mary set up her mac to show slides on the big rolling TV to dinner guests. Then I sat down for dinner with Patty.

4.021 docent, jean

Thursday 12/22/2022

Did the gym. Tidied the apartment. At 10:30 I drove to the museum where I was one of three docents for a custom tour of 35 STEM students from Australia/New Zealand. I don’t think I connected too well, although I tried to. Of my group of 11, 5 stuck with me pretty close and the rest wandered off.

From there I went down to visit Jean to help advise on a problem she has. She has collected a mass of genealogical info on her extended family, which she wants to hand off to some of the younger generation. Her problem is the data is held in an app called Reunion. In order to read it, you need Reunion. So can she put a copy of the app along with the data on a thumb drive? Yes, but then can anybody who gets it, read it? I took the thumb drive home and will look at it tomorrow.

Ate dinner in the dining room, first time in a while.

4.020 glasses, tech, meeting

Wednesday 12/21/2022

Winter solstice, shortest day, days will be getting longer. Went for a walk first thing, nominal.

Before the walk, while reading the paper, I somehow pushed my new glasses sideways and the right nose pad popped off of its little holder. Leaving a sharp metal bracket pressing into my tender flesh. I tried reinstalling it but it popped right out again. So I protected my nose with a small bandaid and went for my walk. But right after, I drove down to Costco and in about ten minutes was out with a new nose pad installed. Stopped for some groceries and back home.

Next up should have been the monthly zoom meeting of FOPAL section managers, but here came an email saying it was not going to happen, happy holidays see you next year.

So instead I did some more tidying up of the AV equipment. In the course of cleaning up on the 11th floor I had found two home-made DVDs, “Variety 2012” and “Revue 2013”. These proved to be videos of two variety performances by CH people, in those years. The one from 2012 is pretty crude, poor sound quality and the camera was just locked-off, no pan or zoom. But the one from 2013 is near-pro quality with good sound, good camera work, and a very polished presentation of the skits and musical numbers.

Anyway I’ve ripped the videos back to computer files and tomorrow will share them with some people who might be interested. I’m not sure what should become of them.

At 3:30 I met with the committee that is planning the 50’s dance party for February. I was mostly an observer. They were working to settle on 30 songs. There are so many more good songs from the 50s than just 30. They had a tough time. My only interest was, what AV would they require, and how much prep do I have to do, given they want sing along lyrics etc.

4.019 covid recap, tech and more tech and SWBB

I want to insert for the reccord, excerpts from Rhonda’s remarks from Monday’s open meeting.

Let’s review how we got here. On Friday, December 9th, staff was notified of residents who had tested positive for Covid and had been in close contact with about 50 other residents during the time that they could have been contagious.

Yadira, Caroline, and I divided the list of 50 people and called each one, asking them to report to our pop-up testing site. Which was my office. Angela, Victoria, Ethan, and Alejandra got the testing set up for 50 people with less than an hour’s notice. By the end of Friday, we had 5 Independent Living residents who had tested positive for Covid.

On Sunday, December 11th, we began to hear from more residents who were experiencing symptoms. In response, we closed the auditorium and asked residents who live in the Tower to visit residents in the Lee Center by phone or online, rather than in-person. We also strongly encouraged those 50 residents who had been in close contact with Covid positive residents to pick up their meals from the dining room and dine in their apartments. In that moment, staff needed to adjust their plans for serving meals, collecting trays, disposing of garbage, and more.

Monday, December 12th marked the 3rd day … By the end of Monday, 19 Independent Living residents had tested positive for Covid.

So, within 3 days, we basically added the equivalent of a new wing of “patients”. We needed to create systems supporting clinical monitoring, serving meals, disposing of garbage, etc. in addition to the staff’s regular duties.

One week following the initial case, we had 25 Independent Living residents with Covid.

…We believe we have seen the peak of our numbers in the Tower. And, we hope to see the number of positive cases decrease over the next week or so. But, we still face further challenges. Our nursing staff in the Tower is stretched very thin supporting all the cases in the Tower until they are cleared. And, some of these residents are still pretty sick…. This comes at a time when a number of other staff are traveling for the holidays. So, we cannot call many staff back to cover for our Covid positive staff because they are not even in the local area.

By and large staff did a really good job of coping with this sudden outbreak. And the residents responded very sensibly as well. No carping, just a shrug and “well, back to pandemic rules.”

Tuesday 12/20/2022

Was awakened at 2:29 am by my phone saying loudly “Earthquake! Drop, cover and hold!” It was the shake alert app telling me about a 6.4 quake “in Humboldt county”. I looked at that and said, no way will we feel that here. But I stayed up a while to see how fast media would respond. They basically didn’t. The local CBS outlet had a “crawler” giving the bare facts, half an hour later. So, back to bed.

Went down and did the gym machine round at 8. Then at 9 I met with Mary Ann who no longer wants to show pictures from her phone on the 11th floor (see 4.009) because the covid outbreak canceled the big family visit she was planning. Now she wants to show pictures from her phone on the tv in her apartment. We went over how to do that.

Then it was time for the writers meeting. I again hadn’t written anything and I wasn’t much impressed with the other writers’ output either.

After lunch I went up to 11 and took another look at the TV setup. This time I made the assumption that whoever had put in the new Comcast box had done it right, so I tried turning on the system with the Comcast remote, instead of the TV remote as we had been doing. And sure enough the had sync’d the Comcast remote to both the receiver and the TV so it turns everything on. Then I cleaned out ten years’ accumulation of useless tech junk from the media cabinet. Now I have a bag of tech junk to dispose of.

At three I met with Kass and we once again went over the problems of the “lecternette” she is using for a mic amplifier for the eight days of Hanukkah that she is running in the lobby. They’ve not been canceled because it’s a small group and they mask up. The problem is the lecternette makes a “pop” noise at intervals. I think it might be some kind of RFI from something in or around the lobby, being picked up by the receiver for the wireless mic. But I can’t prove it. I swapped a couple of cables out and jiggled things and it might have gotten better.

At 6 I met our carpool to go to a SWBB game against Creighton. Creighton is actually nationally ranked, but Stanford handled them fairly easily despite giving up 16 turnovers. Lepolo, freshman point guard who till now had not been an offensive threat, busted out with four 3-pointers, three in a row to start the game.

4.018 meetings, fopal

Monday 12/19/2022

Went for a walk — the full benchmark walk — for the first time in more than a week. It was fine.

At 10:30 joined the Event Coordinators meeting planning the January calendar. A number of things were on the draft calendar for which I have never seen EPF (event planning forms). I protested and explained why they were important.

Then off to FOPAL where there were just a couple of boxes of computer books. I spent an hour doing sorting just for fun.

At 4pm it was time for Rhonda’s open meeting, on zoom again just like back in 2021, because we are not having face to face meetings right now. She described what the staff had to go through when in a single weekend, they identified 25 positive Covid cases in the independent living tower. Fortunately no cases in the Lee center; but with 4 staff members also testing positive, and others away on scheduled holiday breaks, things are stretched very thin. Housekeeping people are being asked once again to be “Covid Heroes” and fill in as nurse’s aides, like in 2020-21.

There was also a lengthy and detailed presentation about online scams, in all their various forms. The staff has been assisting people being scammed rather often, it seems.

My neighbor Linda across the hall, a very smart and with-it person, was taken in by a pop-up message on her screen, something is wrong with your computer, it has been hacked, call this number to talk to Apple support. She fell for it, and later had to go around replacing credit cards and talking to her bank, etc.

4.017 play, meeting, SWBB

So last night’s play was a musical The Secret Garden, based on the classic children’s book. I could just about remember the plot, having read it maybe 68 years ago when I was 12? Since I buy two seats on a season pass to the Bus Barn, excuse me the Los Altos Stage Company, I put out an email to the 6th floor asking if anyone wanted to come along. Dr. Margaret did, so I had company.

The Bus Barn is a tiny house, with seats for maybe 90 people? And a stage area that is maybe 35 feet wide and deep, starting about 3 feet from the front row of audience. This show was a huge effort for them. First off, they have no orchestra pit, so the 10 musicians were lined up along the back wall of the stage. Then they had a total cast of 18 people, and for some numbers, they were all on stage at once, which made the stage about as crowded as a cocktail party. Everyone performed their parts well. The young actress who plays the central character, the orphan girl Mary Lennox, was excellent, both for singing and for acting.

There was a technical shortcoming in that only girl Mary had a mic. The other players just had to project as best they could, which would be no problem, in such a small room, in a spoken play. But in this show, a lot of the dialog was in song lyrics, and the singers had to compete with the live instruments behind them. And a lot of intelligibility was lost. I couldn’t parse a quarter of the lyrics. Frankly it would have been better with no orchestra, just a piano for accompaniment. In fact the whole show would have been better, Dr. Margaret and I agreed on the way back, if it had been heavily edited, about half the roles tossed out, and the music simplified.

Sunday 12/18/2022

Up and about early. Watered the plants, fed the hummingbirds, did the puzzle. At 10 I went down to meet with Kass. She is running the Hanukkah celebrations in the lobby for the next 8 nights, and will use the little rolling lectern for audio. We got it out and tested it, and I left it in her care for the next week.

Then it was time to go to the SWBB game. This was a big one, against Tennessee. Long-time fans remember the literal decades of rivalry between Stanford and Tara, versus Tennessee and Pat Summitt. Pat died several years ago, and the Tennessee program is not the powerhouse it once was, in fact this past week they were dropped out of the top 25 rankings for the first time in forever. But it’s still a big deal when they come here. The usual car-pool of 4 was down to just me and Patty, plus Patty’s niece twice removed, or something, a nice young woman named Hailly.

Stanford started slow and seemed baffled by Tennessee’s defense. The score was tied at the half. In the third quarter the Lady Vols took a lead of up to 9 points. In the fourth quarter, Stanford remembered what they do, and took back the lead and won by 10.

4.016 planning, docent, play

Saturday 12/17/2022

Spent a couple of hours in the initial planning process for the Barcelona trip. Back and forth between the TripAdvisor site, lonely planet, and google maps, finding out where things are. I’m beginning to understand the general shape of Barcelona. I booked two excursions. I found the right URLs to buy a transit pass and a pass for the Hop-on-hop-off “bus touristica”. Marian and I always found the HoHo as we called it, a great way to understand a new city.

After lunch I put on my red shirt and went down to the museum to lead a tour. Started with about 25 people but they thinned out to maybe 15 at the end.

In the evening I am going to a play at the Bus Barn. I’ll critique it tomorrow.

4.015 tech, a/v

Friday 12/16/2022

Went for a walk. Unfortunately the gout had come back in the night so I had to keep it shorter, still 2.7 miles for the day. Foot feels normal again now.

Stew the unstoppable organizer is working on a big event, a 50s dance party, for February, and has dragged me into it for AV support, specifically sound and for some songs, sing-along lyric sheets. I was thinking about this and it seemed like the right tool for the job was iMovie because with it, I can show lyrics in time with the audio of a song, or show actual videos, etc.

So I went to work seeing what I could put together by way of a demo, and in a couple of hours I had put together a rough demo which I shared at this link. (Note to the future, that link won’t work forever, I’ll delete that file soon.)

Between 3 and 5 I went up to 11 and cleaned up most of the wiring behind the media cabinet. Besides a receiver and a giant TV, there’s a blu-ray player, a Roku, a Chromecast, and a Comcast box and a wireless mic receiver. And wiring for left, right, center and surround and subwoofer speakers. Tidied it up a lot and properly labeled everything with removable, readable plastic labels. Replacing some completely unreadable masking-tape labels done who knows how long ago by who knows who.

Didn’t feel hungry so canceled my tentative plan to go out to a restaurant. At all my meals in my room, hand-made sandwiches. Not scared of Covid. Well I better not be because tomorrow I’m going be a docent and then go to a play.

4.014 shustek

Thursday 12/15/2022

Off to the Shustek center to catalog artifacts. First time in months. Gretta, the archivist, is back from giving birth, well she has been back since August, but this is the first time I’d seen her since spring. There were three of us, me, Dave Bennett, and Steve Madsen, three IBM retirees.

Gretta assigned Bennett and Madsen to work together cataloging. At first I was going to do photography, but there were new problems with saving pictures that she needed the house IT staff to fix. So I was put to cataloging alone. I cataloged a complete New Internet Computer donated by someone who worked at that short-lived company. It was in effect, the Chromebook of its day: a cheap PC that couldn’t run anything but a web browser (Netscape Navigator!). Per the Wiki article I linked, it didn’t sell, and Larry Ellison took a financial bath on it.

We ate lunch at a tacqueria and I had a big lunch, so dinner was just an open-face PBJ in my room. Tomorrow I had signed up for a group walk in the Baylands, but it has been canceled due to Covid. So my tomorrow is open. I have things to do.

4.013 laundry, plague

Wednesday 12/14/2022

Did the laundry. Tried to work with my new IBM health coverage, but could not. The problem is, for another 2 weeks I am covered by an AARP policy also administered by United Health Care. Every time I try to sign in, it sends me to that account. I talked to a support person who said, call back after 12/16, when support for the IBM policy should be better.’

I don’t really care, except that I would like to set up payment by EFT. I have received the first bill for the new coverage, pay by check, or sign in to the website to set up EFT. United already taps my SFCU account via EFT for the old policy. One would think they could continue to do that for the new one, but no, it’s a different system.

Did the laundry. Went out to a grocery store for paper towels and bleach.

Gouty foot much better, thank you. Almost normal by evening.

Looked at slide show options. I’m still thinking about making a slide show of the London Bridges pics, for the CH “Sundays @ Home” series. But it would be a lot of work trying to do a proper Ken Burns style show. I might do something simpler, no pan/zoom, just click click click with narration.

In the evening email, we have 4 new positives for a total of 22 active cases in the Tower. That would just about 10% of the population! Me, I’m just fine. Ate supper in the dining room. Maybe 20 people there, and service was much quicker than normal. (Silver linings.)