3.257 easy day

Friday 08/26/2022

Went for the standard walk. Little tired by the end.

Then to the car and off to mail a fat envelope of copied documents to the fiduciary guy. Drove over to California avenue to the post office there, because then I could walk up and down the ave and have a light lunch somewhere interesting, except I ended up at Starbucks anyway, whatever.

In the afternoon I worked on the Studebaker a little bit, and met with the people putting on the Activities Showcase in two weeks, to decide what words should be on the sign for the A/V Committee table.

The SFJazz Friday live stream, I saw, was to be Marcia Ball, not the same performance as I saw a few weeks ago but another one from the same series. So I put it out on the BB mailing list that I would put this on the big screen on 11, and at 7pm I went up there and did that. Got half a dozen other people came along to enjoy also.

3.256 teeth, legal stuff, meeting

Thursday 08/25/2022

First event was to go and get my teeth scraped. Because of having an artificial heart valve, I am supposed to take an oral antibiotic one hour before any dental procedure. They reminded me of this with two texts and two emails in preceding days; and I put it in the calendar, 7am take meds. So of course I’m walking up to the dentist office at 8:25 and realize, no I didn’t take the meds. I go in to apologize and reschedule, but the receptionist says wait, I’ll ask the doctor if we can dispense them now. She did and he ok’d it so I just took the pills there 20 minutes before. Nice, pro-active work by them.

Back to CH and shortly after, depart by car for the Mariah the Lawyer, where I sign a new Will and a modified Trust. So that is done, or, well, begun. Back home again I make a huge list of the paperwork I need to do now. Printing this and that, making copies of this and that, putting stuff in envelopes and stamping them. It takes most of the afternoon.

At 4pm there is the annual Resident/Trustee meeting to review CH finances. Quite a lengthy presentation by Jaisie with lots of graphs and tables. Bottom line, we’re taking in a bit less than we are spending but she is confident it will turn around and by 2027 we will be in the black.

3.255 laundry, mail, model

Wednesday 08/24/2022

Went for the standard walk, no problem.

Took care of a little business, the main feature of which was to write to Jaisie, who is the comptroller/CFO, but who also got tasked with filling in for IT director Vanessa after she quit. This would be Jaisie’s busiest week, because tomorrow is the big annual Resident-Trustee meeting at which the Trustees inform the residents of the state of Channing House, especially its financial state. I acknowledged that and said she should put my note on the “next week” pile, but however — we needed to talk about the next steps in implementing the auditorium upgrade, since the $76K grant application had been approved. She wrote back promptly and with a vague promise to meet soon.

Then I wrote an email to my A/V committee, really polling them on how involved they want to be in the upgrade. So far only two have responded, which isn’t good news. Well, a couple of key members are away this week.

Worked on the Studebaker a bit, doing the extremely fussy job of putting chrome paint with my smallest brush, on fine details like the “V8” symbol on the sides, trunk and hood. This actually went pretty well. Worked on hobby #2, the python program I’m resurrecting from 2015. Did not work on hobby #3, the new novel, working title “Gus and Eileen Meet the Aliens”. No, that’s awful. I also haven’t signed up for any CHM work in the coming week, and I feel obligated to do so.

OK I said Tuesday (?) that I would post that novel chapter here. Why not? Background: back in 2017 astronomers spotted a rock coming through our Solar System. It got dubbed Oumuamua. It came from who knows where, which is also where it went. Bye-bye rock.

So I was thinking, suppose they spotted a big rock like that, kilometers long, coming in and everybody thinks, well, another random space rock passing by, but then it starts to slow down. Which rocks absolutely can’t do. And there’s no obvious sign of a retro-rocket or such; it’s just slowing down. Which, even while the “rock” is, say, still outside the orbit of Jupiter, we know beyond the shadow of a doubt, it isn’t a rock, and it’s doing something (slowing down without any reaction engine) that we can’t do. Knowing only that much, we can be quite sure it is a product of alien technology, and can assume it’s a ship of some kind.

Just that much, no more, and we are suddenly sure of the existence of alien intelligence. We don’t know its nature, but we know it exists, and it’s coming our way. Trying to imagine this scenario it came to me very strongly that just that much changes everything. Every decision, every fact about ourselves, our culture, our world is suddenly cast in a new light. Suddenly, “How will this look to the aliens? What will they think?” are questions everybody would start to ask about everything. #WWETS — hashtag What Will ET Say — would instantly trend on Twitter.

I’d gotten that far when I had a long lunch with Prudence talking about this initial image and we got further. They definitely aren’t here to “invade” — there’s only the one ship, not enough to be an invading force. I don’t think they’re here to invite us to join the Galactic Federation, either. The best dramatic possibilities are, they are in deep trouble and looking for help, or a refuge. Will we help? Can we? Will we just try to take advantage? We could sure use that reactionless drive they seem to have.

Both Pru and I think in terms of YA novels. But, how can you have young adult characters involved with the aliens, when you would expect the government(s) to monopolize all info and jealously guard all comms with the aliens? While talking to Pru I said, because somehow, my characters have cracked a code, become the first humans to actually communicate with them, and the aliens now insist on talking to them only. I believe I said, “They say, ‘where’s Bobby’? and won’t talk to anyone else.” Later I didn’t like the name Bobby, but whatever.

And then the cue, or prompt, for this week’s writers group was, “an opening door.” And immediately I thought of, the kids’ first trip up to the alien ship to meet the aliens, and there’s a door with the aliens on the other side. And I pictured the SpaceX Dragon Capsule. If you place the timeline close, 2030 or so, it would still be current tech. And so here we are.


Chapter One
January 23, 2031

The crew capsule began a roll. Eileen gripped Gus’s gloved hand and felt an answering squeeze. Outside the left viewport, the vast gray-brown hull of the Stheentar rolled past the capsule.
“Geez Lou-eeze that’s big,” said Gus, his voice on the radio sounding flat and distant in Eileen’s headphones.
“Radio silence, please, ambassador,” came the voice of Major Whitby. From their back-row seats Gus and Eileen looked at the back of the Major’s helmet and the row of computer screens in front of him. Inside her helmet Eileen poked her tongue out in defiance. That brought a shoulder nudge from Gus. She peered left through her faceplate and saw him giving her a fake “behave!” scowl from inside his helmet.
Major Whitby reached up and tapped a couple of controls on one of his screens, then said, “Stheentar, this is Embassy One, we are aligned on your docking collar, I read 508 meters separation, closing at 1.2 meters per second, over.”
“Our readings agree, Embassy One, thank you.” The light, pleasant voice in their headphones was familiar to both Gus and Eileen; they’d been talking with it — or with the person, or people, or… the beings?, behind it — for weeks. They’d established early that it was artificial, computer-generated, and that the actual voice of a reethlin, assuming the reeth had voices, would be quite different. They’d argued between themselves, and with the UN committee members who monitored their conversations, whether it was meant to be male or female, and what accent it was supposed to have. Gus, with the authority of a guy who at age seventeen could speak six languages, said its English was certainly Canadian, probably from Montreal. Eileen, who was more at home reading C++ and HTML than English, thought it sounded more like her Australian cousin.
“Embassy One, Guiana.” Guiana, the European Space Agency launch center, was the ground communication point for this mission.
“Guiana, go,” Major Whitby sounded annoyed. His gloved hands moved from one control screen to another.
“Embassy One, we have the President of the USA on the line for the ambassadors.”
“Guiana, we are just a bit busy at the moment. Request you hold.”
“Also Secretary General Gutierrez.”
“Guiana, I am about to perform a docking into alien hardware on a giant alien spacecraft, and I kindly request that until I report ‘docked’ you just shut the fuck up.”
There was a brief pause; then “Guiana out.”
Gus mugged a bug-eyed “ooooh” to Eileen, who grinned back. There was silence for a long minute, broken only by the rapid popping noises of the RCS maneuvering jets. Then Major Whitby said “Stheentar, Embassy One.”
“Go ahead, Major,” replied the cool, sort-of-Canadian voice.
“A hundred meters out, closing at half a meter per second, request alignment check.”
“Alignment perfect, Major. Is ‘right down the pipe’ the appropriate phrase?” Gus nudged Eileen. She smiled back, remembering when they had gone over a long list of colloquialisms at the request of the reeth.
“That’s a very welcome phrase, Stheentar. Thank you. Request a count at multiples of ten meters.”
“Roger, Embassy One. Just passed 90, coming up on 80 meters… now.”
“Slowing,” said the Major, and tapped another screen, which brought on another rattle of RCS noise. Gus thought he could feel the change, like when you just tap the brakes in a car.
“Sixty meters, still on axis.” The two passengers could only clutch their seat restraints and watch Major Whitby hovering over his screens, while the cool voice counted the craft in: “Forty meters… Thirty… Twenty… Ten meters and on axis.” Major Whitby made one last set of adjustments then sat back.
“…Two meters, one meter…” there was a thump and a series of clack noises. “Docking complete, Embassy One. Welcome to Stheentar.”
“Guiana, Embassy One, we are docked.”
“Roger, Embassy One, we heard. A lot of cheering going on here.”
The Major turned half-way around in his seat. “Are you two OK?”
“Yes, sir,” said Gus and Eileen said “We’re great!” at the same moment.
“Good; do you want to take that call from the politicos now?”
They looked at each other. “Sure,” said Gus and “Of course,” said Eileen.
“Guiana, we’re ready for that call now.”
“One moment, Embassy One, there’s some… uh… discussion here.” Apparently the launch communicator forgot to mute his mic because they could hear him say to someone, “So who’s going first, the POTUS or the Secretary? … About 6 billion people are hearing dead air… OK, is that… OK. Uh, Embassy One, Guiana.”
“Go ahead, Guiana.”
“We have the Secretary General of the UN who has just a brief word to say to the Ambassadors. Go ahead, Excellency.”
The Secretary General’s words were less than brief and contained nothing Gus and Eileen had not heard from a dozen trainers and diplomats in prior weeks, but they were finally over.
“Thank you sir,” said Eileen. “And now we…” but the voice of the alien communicator cut in.
“Embassy One, are you ready to proceed with entry?”
“Uh, roger, very shortly now,” started Major Whitby, but Gus cut in on him with a very definite “Yes, Stheentar, we are ready.”
“I’m releasing my seat restraints,” said Eileen, and did so. Both of them floated easily up toward the round capsule hatch above the seats — exactly as they had practiced several times before. “Major, can you initiate the hatch sequence?”
“Roger, Eileen, initiating hatch opening,” and he tapped a sequence on a panel. There were clicks and whirrs as the latch dogs withdrew. As rehearsed, Gus reached up and swung the hatch downward into the capsule.
“Remember, Ambassadors,” said the alien voice, “orient toward the dark surface. That will be down, when we turn on the gravity.”
Awkwardly, the two floated in turn through the hatch and into the entrance bay of the alien craft. One of the walls was indeed painted a dark gray, while all the others were silvery metal. A sturdy metal stanchion sprouted out of the dark wall. Eileen grabbed it, and then grabbed Gus’s suited foot as he floated by. They pulled themselves to float parallel to the post, and Gus said, “OK, ready.”
“Gravity on in three, two, one.”
Suddenly they were pulled down firmly and found themselves standing on a dark floor in a metal room. This, artificial gravity, was the number one technical subject that their trainers wanted them to acquire, and now they had experienced it.
To their right was the round opening in a wall, through which they could see the inside of the capsule and Major Whitby peering in. But directly ahead was a proper door, maybe a little shorter and wider than a door in a human building, but clearly a door, with a knob.
“Ambassadors, are you ready to meet?” came the voice in their headphones.
Gus took an audible breath, and looked at Eileen, who nodded. “Sure. Shall we just…”
“Of course. Come on in.”
And they walked across to the door and turned the knob.

Chapter Two
Eighteen Months Earlier


So there we are. The book opens with this, then jumps back to when the arriving vessel is first noticed, follows Gus and Eileen as they combine their unique talents to do what the U.N. and the CIA can’t do, open communications with the aliens. And after, as they find out what the aliens are like physically — hint, their body plan is based on radial symmetry rather than bilateral symmetry like ours — and learn what their real problem is. Which I don’t know what it is yet.

3.254 meeting, heritage circle

Tuesday 08/23/2022

Started the morning with exercise in the new gym. Machines are a bit awkward to use.

For the writers group I read “chapter one” of the new novel. I may append it to this post, later. This is going up Wednesday morning because I just forgot.

The Heritage Circle announced their grants in the afternoon, and the AV grant was fully funded at $76,000. So now I am going to have to help manage that project into existence.

3.253 fopal, power

Monday 08/22/2022

I woke up at 6 as usual but immediately knew, without even putting my glasses on, that the power was off. There are a couple of things on my desk with pilot lights, quite bright ones when my eyes are dark-adapted, and they were off. Stepping into the bathroom, the little blue night-light was also off.

I put on clothes and went out to explore. Met Paul, another resident, and we exchanged notes. All the houses outside were dark as far as Middlefield, two blocks over, and for a couple of blocks the other way.

I was pleasantly impressed with how many lights were working, presumably from the emergency generator in the basement. All the halls were lit well enough, and the lounge and dining room on each floor. And the hallways through the basement to the garage, as I found out later. The staff coped very well indeed. Kitchen staff apparently had enough power for refrigerators and some heating, because they served a cafeteria-style breakfast, lunch and dinner. The Wi-Fi worked! And they put out status emails every couple of hours all day. We were not to use water, as the pump didn’t have power to get water above the 5th floor. The main elevators were not powered, but the one freight elevator was up. I ended up climbing to 6 twice during the day.

I went away to FOPAL for my usual Monday, spending 2 and a half hours on 8 boxes of books. Then back home. Around 2pm a staff crew came around to all floors above 5th, to manually flush toilets. They had a big plastic garbage cart filled with water, and a bucket, and would come in and flush the toilet with a bucketful of water.

Craig organized the 6th floor for a picnic. We picked up our hot dogs or hamburgers in the dining room and brought them back to our floor dining room. We were sitting around finishing up when at about 6:14, the power came back on. Two people were up at 4am and had no power, so that was a 14-hour outage.

3.252 concert

Sunday 08/21/2022

Up betimes (how Samuel Pepys often opened a post in his blog) and had read the paper, refreshed the hummingbird feeders, watered the plants, showered and done the crossword by 9:30. Then I did a bit of real work, reading the draft materials that Mariah the Lawyer had sent me. That went quickly, so I put in half an hour on the Studebaker that I’ve been neglecting all week.

Next, off to the grocery store for bread and peanut butter, and a package of cookies. Because the main activity today was to attend a house concert and it is customary to contribute to the snacks. Sandy went with me. This concert was at the house on Rose Avenue. Back in the day Marian and I attended three or four concerts there over the years. I calculated that the last one would probably have been in 2017.

This one was the jazz duo Brian Holland and Danny Coots. It was excellent, ragtime and a little boogie-woogie, jokes and superb musicianship. Back home by 5:30.

In the middle of the day I started writing a scene from that SF story I was workshopping with Prudence the other day. The writers group cue this week is “an open door”. Talking about it at lunch with Linda something melded between that and the SF story. Hmm.

3.251 tech, shopping, tech failure

Saturday 08/20/2022

Took a tech squad call to start the day, at 9am. Visited Nancy to see if I could fix her mac which stopped receiving email when she installed the recent OS upgrade. As I suspected all I had to do was go to Preferences – Internet Accounts and, yup, it needed to log in to Google again to get gmail. Fixed.

Then I went on a shopping trip to look at EVs. I am not very impressed. The BMW i4 is a big sleek sedan but just seemed too heavy and massive. Didn’t like. The Mini Cooper EV is cute and would actually do for me, except that its range is a puny 100 miles. The VW ID.4 is a big SUV. Make a fine family car, but I have no family. I wanted to see the Hyundai Ioniq-5 but they had none. “Extremely limited availability” the web site says and the dealer agrees.

The Chevy Bolt is for the time being the survivor, although I somehow missed the Kia dealer. I need to see a Kia Niro EV in the, um, flesh. Steel. It’s probably more bulky than I want but I can’t tell for sure from pictures. Bolts are available, although the combination of upgrades I’d like are hard to find.

Afternoon, I was to run a hybrid zoom event. I set everything up, I swear, exactly like the last time, only this time, there was nasty feedback from Zoom into the auditorium system. I couldn’t get rid of it. Initially we started the meeting with no zoom audio. Then I thought to try feeding zoom through the macbook’s own mic, rather than from the audio system feed. That gave the dozen zoom users usable audio.

I was very disappointed with myself and pissed at that fucking audio system. We have had months to make this work and every time I try to run a meeting something different goes wrong with it.

3.250 meeting, volleyball

Friday 08/19/2022

Went for a walk in the morning. Earlier I picked up on news of an urgent update for Apple devices, phones ipads and macs alike. So i put out a notice to the bulletin board. Naturally I was dealing with replies all day from people who couldn’t figure out how to update their iPads or whatever.

At noon I had a date with Prudence, the other fiction writer at CH. Well, more of a fiction writer than I am; she has published more than one novel for children with a real publisher. I have been mulling an idea, or some related but vague ideas, for a SF book and I wanted her help to figure out some more ideas and approaches. So we had lunch and talked this over and she was very helpful. I don’t want to try to write about the ideas now, or here.

In the afternoon I gave in to temptation and worked on some software. I wrote a large program a few years ago. Called PPQT (never mind why) it was a major effort that never got used by anybody but me. I last updated it on GitHub in 2017, until now. For some reason last week I took another look at it. It depends heavily on a GUI platform called Qt, and Qt has moved on a major version, from Qt5 to Qt6, in the years gone by. So I started in a casual sort of way, to update it to use the newer version. And I find it just seductive. I can sink into the programmer’s meditative state and time just flies by. I need to ration it; it’s like a drug.

At 5:15 I went down and picked up the sandwich I had ordered to go, and met with Patty and Martha to go to the “Cardinal and White Scrimmage”, a pre-season event for the Stanford women’s volleyball team. It was ok, but volleyball is not a game that grabs me much.

3.249 meeting, docent, evs

Thursday 08/18/2022

This morning I had committed to attend a FOPAL coffee session at the Mitchell Park Community Center at 10:30. We have a substitute maid this month while Wanda is on vac. and she likes to do my room early, instead of the usual 2pm time that Wanda does it. So I left at 9am, did a bank deposit, then sat in the car at Mitchell Park until time. The coffee included pretty good pastries and a talk by somebody from the Library telling about all the activities they have been funding using the money that FOPAL generates.

Stuffed with pastries I went back home and changed to my docent shirt. Patty had agreed to come along on my tour so we drove down to CHM, where guess who was standing in line to buy a ticket but Denny, who I had lunch with two days back. I had told him I was doing this tour and he’d said he might come by, but it was a surprise just the same. Anyway I had a total of about 15 people, just the right size for the tour, and we had a good time.

In between various activities above, I spent a couple of hours making a spreadsheet listing all the full battery electric vehicles I might like to kick the tires of. What they approximately cost, the manufacturer website, the local dealer, etc. Have I decided to buy an full EV? Probably. I certainly do not like the looks of the current Prius line, and I’m tired of waiting for Toyota to revise it. Anyway, I think the tech and the charging infrastructure is good enough to support full EV, especially given my pathetic driving distances.

I might even go look at a Lucid, June’s fave. Patty said she had seen a Lucid up close when they were doing a demo on University ave recently and it impressed her.

3.248 tech, meeting, dinner

Wednesday 08/17/2022

Went for a walk. At 11:30 met with Bert to show him how to erase the hard drive of a mac that had been donated. It didn’t go quite as planned, possibly solid state drives don’t erase the same?

At 1pm there was a zoom meeting of FOPAL volunteers. The sale last weekend was very successful, over $20K income, highest since pre-pandemic days.

At 5 it was time for dinner. Tonight there is to be a talk by Larry Basso, a resident who is sort of related to Dennis from the early days (1970s) of Dennis’s first marriage. So I had invited Dennis and Larry to dinner, and two of my favorite neighbors Lennie and Caroline. Dennis and Larry did have a lot to talk about with each other catching up on various family connections.

Dennis opted not to stay around for Larry’s talk, which turned out to be a wise choice as the talk, while interesting, ran on until 9pm. Since it was not on Zoom, there was a good turnout, possibly the most people I’ve seen in the auditorium since 2019.