4.184 tech, docent

Saturday 06/03/2023

In the morning I had a date to help Nancy rehearse for her Book Talk on Monday. This went smoothly. She is an experience public speaker and had no problem with the over-the-ear microphone. All I had to do was the magic incantation to make her computer’s screen appear on the projector, and she was all set.

Next up was to drive to the museum and lead the noon tour. The museum busy and I started with at least 25 people. Some peeled off but I still had at least 18 at the end, and a nice round of applause.

I had dinner with Patty, Leon and Margaret. Mostly hearing about Patty’s recent trip back East.

According to my calendar I have another tour at 5:30pm tomorrow, but checking other sources, I think that was a mistake, there is no such tour, and the tour with that description is actually at 1:30 with other docents.

4.183 tech, no game, concert

Friday 02/06/2023

Took the standard walk. At 10:30 I met with Lynn to answer a tech help call re apple photos. No real problem, concerns straightened out.

At 1 I headed out intending to see a Stanford baseball game, the first game of a regional playoff. However there was nowhere to park within a quarter mile of the stadium so I left, thinking, alright fine I’ll watch it on telly. Back home however, I found that the ESPN+ streaming service, that I used to be able to get free with my Comcast sub, now wanted me to sign up for $9 a month or some such. Yeah, no. Checked later to find Stanford won 13-2.

At 6 met up with Sandy to drive in her car to a house concert. Actually a yard concert a couple miles away in Mountain View. The performers were two fiddle players and a guitarist/vocalist. They were all very skilled musicians and played well as far as I could tell, but the host had provided no amplification. Violins and acoustic guitar, played outdoors, really need amplification. Even sitting 20 feet away the sound was very thin. One of the fiddle guys told a corny joke between each song. Here’s one: A möbius strip walks into a bar, and it’s crying. “What’s your problem, buddy?” the barkeep asks. The strip replies, “Oh where do I begin?”

Main problem was, the temperature quickly dropped below 60 and there was a breeze. I had anticipated and wore a sweater but it was barely enough, and we were pretty chilled by the time it was over and we started back. So not a great concert experience.

4.182 old friend gone, shustek

Thursday 06/01/2023

Got a comment on yesterday’s post from Pat Snow, wife of John Snow, saying that he had passed after nearly 57 years of their marriage. It’s been quite a while since I actually saw John, and memories of him are way in the past. Here’s one. This would be when I was maybe 20 and John was a couple of years older, and much more experienced, having actually served a couple of years in the military. Anyway, he was still living in his mother’s house in Seattle. I think this is the period when I was living in a studio apartment on Capitol Hill, not far away. (Horrible time of my life.) Anyway, the Seattle paper ran a contest with some decent prizes. I don’t remember details but it involved answering trivia questions which had clearly been designed to be ambiguous, so that any question could be answered different ways. Answers had to be sent in on forms printed in the paper. We spent a weekend making answer forms and entered many times answering every question multiple ways. Didn’t win a thing. In hindsight, they probably threw out our hand-drawn forms. But that was how John was, willing to throw himself completely into any project that engaged him.

Today I spent a full day at Shustek center, processing 4 boxes of Sandy Fraser’s papers. These mostly related to multiple projects that AT&T had during the early 90s, to build consumer devices, music players or home networking hubs, or chips that would be part of such products. None of them made it into production. This very smart guy with all of Bell Labs’ expertise behind him, repeatedly made wrong guesses about where consumer taste was going, and where technology was going. Was it Yogi Berra who said, “Predictions are hard, especially about the future.” (Actually no, it was originally a Danish proverb.)

4.181 laundry, fopal, talk

Wednesday 05/31/2023

While the first load of laundry ran I took a short walk and had a nice coffee and pastry break. Then finished up the laundry. Later, to kill some time, I ran down to FOPAL and did an hour’s sorting. Added about 100 words to the novel, and fiddled around with a programming problem that has been bothering me.

In the evening I went downstairs for a talk. Professor Emeritus David Abernethy, taught at Stanford from the 1960s, working on a book in retirement. He’s writing about the general issue of how a few European countries came to dominate and colonize so much of the world, with effects still shaping the world today. He summarized that in an hour, so basically the outline of his book. I didn’t like how David M. was running the A/V but since he is one of my very best team members I am not going to criticize.

4.179 missed lunch

Monday 05/29/2023

It’s Memorial Day. And CH scheduled a BBQ lunch outdoors on the patio behind the dining room. I really meant to go to that. Was quite looking forward to it. And forgot all about it. I went for the standard walk in the morning, and then about 10:30 went down to FOPAL and did two hours of work, and came home about 1 and had a snack in my room. So stupid. I did a similar thing yesterday; Caroline invited everyone on the 6th floor to come join a “broadway musical sing-along plus ice cream” event at her church, which is less than a mile away. That was yesterday at 3, and I even had it on my calendar. Just forgot. And I was bored yesterday, too.

I don’t like myself when I act like such a doofus; also I don’t like the implications. Am I getting worse about it? Or have I always been a doofus, it’s just more obvious when I don’t have a spouse to remind me of things?

4.178 walk, novel

Sunday 05/28/2023

After my traditional Sunday Watering of the Plants and Crossing of the Words, I decided to walk to a market. But not over to the California Avenue one, because I’ve done that. Rather to the one in Menlo Park, because I hadn’t. Well it was a nice 2.5mile walk but the market is not a patch on the one to the South, or even on the Saturday one.

Nice little market, I said in a patronizing tone, and had coffee and pastry at, plan D, Starbucks. Plan A had been, buy something nummy at the market. Plan B was La Boulanger but they were not open. On Sunday at 10am? Crazy. Plan C was a bagel place next door but I wasn’t really feeling bagelish, so, plan D. Anyway.

In the afternoon I actually added words to the novel. Pat pat pat.

4.177 tech, lunch

Saturday 05/27/2023

First of two well-nigh unstructured days. In the morning I solved a tech problem, well, I took a second look and found the obvious answer.

Yesterday after the AV team meeting I was thinking about the upcoming dramatic presentation. I wrote about this on Wednesday (174), how at supper I had learned by chance the CH drama group had decided to have a performance in the middle of June. How this was not on the monthly calendar that was just about finalized and ready to be published; how they had not bothered to file an Event Planning Form to in request support from AV; etc. You want microphones? You want the stage lights turned on? You best file an EPF.

Subsequently I learned that they actually plan two performances, one morning and one evening on 6/16. When I suggested that they might want a tech rehearsal to try out the mics and such, they thought that was a good idea, so that is scheduled for 6/14. And they did get listed in the calendar that goes out to every apartment, before it went to press. But I had also learned that they have been working on two-person scenes, and the presentation will be four scenes, each with two people. The rest of the cast will wait in the Green Room for their turns.

So yesterday after the meeting I realized, it has been years since the Green Room — a little room off a hallway behind the stage — has actually been used as for performer prep. I wonder if the monitor in there works to show a view of the stage, and the sound works. Because if they are waiting for a cue, they need to hear a cue. So I went down and tested it. The monitor works fine, shows a camera view of the stage. But there was no sound.

I sent an email to our tech mailing list asking if anyone remembered whether Green Room audio worked before. Bert wrote back, it used to, look for a volume control. A volume control!?! What a concept!! This morning I went down there and sure enough, there is a big, obvious, black knob, just inside the door, right beside the light switch.

DOH!

Turn it up, and sound from the auditorium system comes in loud and clear.

For the heck of it I called up Dennis and suggested lunch. He suggested Santana Row. I haven’t been down there since I browsed it along with Marian, probably 2016. It was good. Santana Row is a shopping mall in the form of a European pedestrian district, streets with shops and restaurants. It was bustling with lots of people, mostly youngish, and there was a good vibe. We had a pleasant lunch and chat.

Back home, about 5:30 the Comcast signal went out and all the TVs died. As of 9pm it is still not back.

4.176 docent, meeting

Friday 05/26/2023

At 9am I drove down to the museum to lead a group of 20 “members of the UK Armed Forces Advanced Command & Staff Course” according to the schedule. Bunch of 30-something men, mostly, no women, a few maybe older. I got a nice round of applause at the end so I guess I did a good job.

My other activity for the day was to hold an A/V committee meeting at 4. I had set up the two Lecternettes with their new wireless mic setups. I just checked, these aren’t made any more. There are products kinda sorta similar, but not with the extra inputs and stuff. So after we had debated over who would do what upcoming events, I urged the 4 attendees to take some time, poke around and get to know the systems. I had made an info sheet for each with pictures and arrows. When I write that I think of Arlo Guthrie singing about the “8 by 10 glossy photos with circles and arrows and a paragraph on the back”.

In the mail tonight? A bill from El Camino hospital for $1500. Huh? I haven’t been there in a year. So I turn it over and find that in fact, this is the residual bill for my TAVR operation of May 2022. It has taken this long for the charges to work through all the layers of insurers. The total for the operation was $360,000. After all the reductions and offsets and payments, the residue for me to pay is $1500. OK, I’m good with that.

4.175 docent, shustek

Thursday 05/25/2023

First up was to lead a tour. Supposedly “30 IEEE members” and I was the only docent signed up. I expected a crowd of engineers in mid-career, so they would know a lot. Wrong. It turned out to be 21, not 30, which was good news, and they were college students, ranging in age from 20-25, with a handful of 30-somethings. So I had to do a lot more explaining than I had expected. But they were fine.

Then off to the East Bay for an afternoon sorting more of the papers of Sandy Fraser. This session was more interesting than before because a whole box was documents from the middle 1990s and related to a project that Fraser was apparently promoting inside AT&T, to build a consumer product, a “personal music player”. This was the same era when Sony was promoting their “Minidisc” format, and Philips was promoting the “digital compact cassette”.

Sandy wrote many memos between 1992 and 1997 promoting his idea of a digital music player based on solid-state media. AT&T apparently owned some patents for high-quality digital audio compression, and he wanted to leverage those to get lots of music into the limited memory capacity of the day. It was clear to me that he came close to inventing something like the iPod.

I’m filing all these memos, and it was really interesting. However, unlike Steve Jobs, Fraser and his Bell Labs team didn’t have a clear picture of what would work as a consumer product — or any experience whatever with consumer marketing. When it came out in 2001, the iPod was a complete system, interfacing to Apple computers, with the iTunes app as a music store and music distribution system. Music publishers could just send their audio files to Apple and start earning cash from every iTunes download. I didn’t see any sign that Fraser thought about the support infrastructure, or a system of selling music.