Sturgeon’s Law

Ninety per­cent of every­thing is crap.


Derived from a quote by sci­ence fic­tion author Theodore Stur­geon, who once said, “Sure, 90% of sci­ence fic­tion is crud. That’s because 90% of every­thing is crud.” Oddly, when Sturgeon’s Law is cited, the final word is almost invari­ably changed to ‘crap’.

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Columbia - 29204 Stubby Rocket Whitmire - 29178 Self Portrait

Miles Per Gallon

Fuelly Fuelly

Time For A New Look?

In the past few weeks I’ve had sev­eral good sub­jects for blog posts, but for what­ever rea­son I can’t seem to sit down at the key­board and run with them.

Is it time for a new theme here? Maybe if the place had a dif­fer­ent look I would want to con­tribute some­thing here. Maybe. Now it remains to be seen if I can muster the enthu­si­asm for remodeling…

Started down, went up, still up.
Miata Top Tran­si­tions since 10/24/08: 1131

Mom? Mom? Mom? Mom? Mom?

We had din­ner with the MMC tonight at a Mex­i­can restau­rant in Augusta. Through­out the entire meal there was a baby crying/vocalizing loud enough to be sort of annoy­ing. From where I was sit­ting I could see the mother rock­ing the car seat that the baby was in. The mother was doing this in an absent-minded way while star­ing at her smartphone.

Maybe, just maybe, if she picked up the baby it might have qui­eted down.

Started up, went down, still down.
Miata Top Tran­si­tions since 10/24/08: 1132

Well That Explains That

For lack of any­thing worth watch­ing on the tube this evening, I had the first Iron Man movie on. It was play­ing on FX, so it was chock block full of com­mer­cials, but it was bet­ter than Enter­tain­ment Tonight, Wheel of For­tune or the 38th view­ing of a Two And A Half Men repeat episode. One of the best sequences of the movie is Tony bust­ing out of that cave with his cob­bled together orig­i­nal Iron Man suit. Just after crash­ing into a sand dune in the mid­dle of the desert, miles from who knows where, we go to some commercials.

What comes next in the movie I saw in the the­aters 4 years ago, and what is on the DVD I got for Christ­mas later in 2008, is we see Mr. Stark walk­ing around in the sand and then within a cou­ple min­utes Colonel Rhodes shows up with some heli­copters to res­cue him. I always thought this a lit­tle odd because, how did they get to the mid­dle east and the scene of hun­dreds of Stark Indus­tries explod­ing in flames so fast.

What came next on TV was a scene of a bunch of sol­diers load­ing into some big heli­copters. Tony’s friend “Rhodey” Rhodes is there and gets stopped by some Gen­eral who teas­ingly chides him that head­ing off to find Stark is a fools errand as no one has any way of know­ing where he might be. This explains away that quick find.

Pretty coin­ci­den­tal tim­ing on the search mis­sion and Tony com­plet­ing his escape in the newly fin­ished Iron Man suit. Then again it is a “comic book” movie, so you really can’t dig too deep on any­thing going on with­out find­ing incongruities.

Super Moon Other Way

We went out dri­ving in the Miata look­ing for tonight’s Super Moon. Once we got head­ing east we could see we were in trou­ble because we could see the tops of thun­der clouds on the hori­zon. It was still in the upper 80’s, but the sun was down and it seemed pleas­ant enough, so we kept on dri­ving. Fol­lowed one road til it T’d at a dirt road, flipped a men­tal coin and went left. A lit­tle less than a mile we came to a paved road with a rec­og­niz­able name, so we took it and headed back into town for some ice cream.

Part way back, as we drove along a smooth, two-lane back road there was the moon off to the left. Found a place to stop and take some pho­tos, but by that time it was too high in the sky to look any­thing dif­fer­ent that a plain ol’ full moon. Fooled around snap­ping pho­tos, but noth­ing came out worth any­thing except maybe this pic­ture of The Emperor with a car pass­ing in the back­ground taken fac­ing away from the Super Moon.

Started down, still down.
Miata Top Tran­si­tions since 10/24/08: 1132

May The Odds Be Ever In Your Favor

Donna, I and 20 of our clos­est strangers saw The Hunger Games this morn­ing. Went for a bike ride to DD for break­fast and when we got home there was enough time to shower, change and drive to Augusta to catch the 10:30 show­ing in some sta­dium seating.

Nei­ther one of us has read any of the books, we both had a sketchy idea of the plot from media immer­sion, but the real rea­son we went to see it was that it was filmed mostly in our favorite part of the coun­try, west­ern North Car­olina. Not a bad lit­tle movie. I enjoyed it more than Donna, but nei­ther of us will be wait­ing with breath­less antic­i­pa­tion for the sec­ond installment.

After doing all the prep work the last cou­ple weeks, re-watching Iron Man 2, watch­ing Thor, watch­ing Cap­tain Amer­ica, and see­ing the trailer in the the­ater today, I can now say, “I think I’ll be wait­ing for the DVD of The Avengers.” I almost hate to admit it, but I buy a dystopian future where teenagers bat­tle to the death on tele­vi­sion before I swal­low the premise of an Asgar­dian vil­lain attack­ing Earth and to the res­cue come this group of “superheroes.”

The next movie I see in a movie the­ater will be some­time after June 8th:

If base­ball suc­cess and fan sat­is­fac­tion were mea­sured in innings played, this weekend’s three game set with Bal­ti­more Ori­oles, total­ing 39 innings (more than 4 com­plete games worth) would mean great things. Unfor­tu­nately they don’t, win­ning does.

The odds cer­tainly are not in the favor of the Red Sox.

A lit­tle less than a month into the 2012 sea­son the FRS are 11 and 16 leav­ing them in last place, 7–1/2 games out of the divi­sion lead. After today’s loss they are on pace for a 66 win, 96 loss sea­son. Maybe if they try a lit­tle less harder they can get an even 100 losses to honor this 100th year anniver­sary of Fen­way Park.

Critisism

I love some Mad Men. At first I was just sucked into its pitch per­fect take on the early 60’s, but the more you watch, the more you real­ize that this is one of the most nuanced things on TV. The trou­ble with that nuance thing is that while I still enjoy watch­ing the show, fol­low­ing the char­ac­ters and their story arcs, the big pic­ture if you will, I now need help with rec­og­niz­ing all the small brush strokes that cre­ate the total piece of art.

For that I have to turn to var­i­ous reviews and recaps, plus their ever enter­tain­ing and some­times infor­ma­tive com­ments. Usual reads are Hit­Fix, Vul­ture, Press­Play and my favorite, the AV Club.

Tonight’s home­work assign­ment kid­dies is to watch this past Sunday’s episode, Lady Lazarus, then go read the AV Club review and see what you missed. If you can’t be both­ered with watch­ing the show, just go read the AV Club piece.

Started down, went up, still up.
Miata Top Tran­si­tions since 10/24/08: 1133

My Cookies Have Names

I get some cook­ies for a morn­ing snack. The quan­tity varies depend­ing on how many total are in the pack­age and divid­ing that num­ber by five and I try and mix it up by get­ting some­thing dif­fer­ent each week. Nut­ter But­ter, Oreos* (reg­u­lar and reverse), Fig New­tons and sev­eral Kee­bler vari­eties (Deluxe Gra­hams, Fudge Sticks or Fudge Stripes.) This week, a Kee­bler cookie I hadn’t tried, E.L Fudge® Orig­i­nals, were on sale for $2, so I picked up a pack.

Two vanilla cook­ies with a layer of fudge in the mid­dle, but they’re not as tasty to me as the other Kee­bler offer­ings or the reverse Oreos. They are shaped like the lit­tle elves that live in that hol­low tree and even have names, Ernie, Elwood, Buck­ets & Fast Eddie. They are a lit­tle dis­con­cert­ing to eat, esp­sce­cially because I usu­ally start by bit­ting off their heads.**

*Did you know that along with the Titanic and Fen­way Park***, Oreos are also cel­e­brat­ing their 100th Anniversry?

**Does it make me a zom­bie because I eat the brains first? Or am just being zom­bie safe by killing the brain?

***There is def­i­nitely a joke in that pair­ing somewhere.

Crooked Hat As A Metaphor For A Baseball Season

When I was up in Char­lotte for some train­ing at the end of March, while my com­pa­tri­ots were shop­ping in the Bass Pro Shop, I stepped out into the Con­cord Mills Mall proper to buy some­thing different.

The 2012 base­ball sea­son had yet to begin and in spite of their some­what lack­lus­ter spring train­ing record, I was opti­mistic for a nice run to the play­offs for the FRS.

It was time to replace my old Red Sox hat, it had sev­eral jagged white lines of dried sweat rings in the cap area* and the brim was get­ting kind of floppy.

* Sweat rings in a ball cap are only accept­able for super­sti­tious pro base­ball play­ers and old school farm­ers.

My last hat had the big B on the front, but the Sox had a new man­ager this year and hope­fully a new atti­tude, so this time I wanted a new look. Duck­ing into a Lids store nearby the Bass Pro Shop, I picked out my hat, tried it on to make sure it fit and paid the man. I opted for the dan­gling socks logo — Style 20000459.

I wore my new cap proudly in April even though they got off to a rocky start, show­ing that my fan­dom for the Red Sox was sin­cere and I was not just some band­wagon hop­per. But the deeper in the month we went, the less likely this was that it was only a slow start, but more an indi­ca­tion that I was in for a long los­ing summer.

I had the hat on this week­end and when I looked in the Pur­ple Whale’s rear view mir­ror, noticed that dan­gling socks were not exactly cen­tered** over the brim. Hmmm. Prob­a­bly off by only a half a degree and notice­able by only me, but it kind of soured my want­ing to con­tinue to wear the hat.

**Should have checked myself in a mir­ror when I tried on the hat.

Mon­day morn­ing when I read The Sox­a­holix web comic, it cap­tured my feel­ings exactly: The Glass Is Com­pletely Vacated

I guess I will wear the hat one more time, it will be on a cloudy day when Donna and I go out to eat some­where in Augusta, so I can “acci­den­tally” leave it in the booth and not really “notice” it until it is too late to go back for it.

Started up, went down, still down.
Miata Top Tran­si­tions since 10/24/08: 1134

Close Encounter Of The Google Kind

It’s Fri­day, so, as usual, Donna and I rode the tan­dem to work. As we parked the bike in the rack Donna noticed some­thing hang­ing from the back tire. On closer inspec­tion it turned out to be a sec­tion of the tire about the size of 2 quar­ters side by side that had sep­a­rated from the kevlar belts. It was still hold­ing air so we opted to ride it home, but agreed not to bomb down the hills and take it easy on the cor­ners in case of sud­den air con­tain­ment failure.

A lit­tle more than half way home we came to a halt at a stop sign we usu­ally don’t have to stop at. Not because our tire blew out, but because there was a car com­ing from the left. It looked a lit­tle weird, there were some odd stripes and it had green doors, so I knew it was vinyl wrapped to adver­tise some busi­ness. I was so intent on try­ing to fig­ure out what they were adver­tis­ing for for that it took a while to reg­is­ter that there was some­thing very weird about the car.

It had a 3′ stalk stick­ing out of the roof with a red disco ball on top — it was a Google Street View Car! I waved meekly as it passed. Because it was going the way we were going, we turned right and fol­lowed. The Google car got stopped at the light at the next block and I pulled up right behind it to wait. The light turned green and the car pulled off. I gave another wave as Donna and I turned left to con­tinue on the way home.

I don’t know when they will update the Street View for that inter­sec­tion and stretch of road, the cur­rent images are from Decem­ber 2007, but when they do, we’ll be famous.

The Emperor got a bath this after­noon because tomor­row is the MMC Tech Day and heaven for­bid I show up with a dirty car.

Started down, went up, still up.
Miata Top Tran­si­tions since 10/24/08: 1135

126,000 Nyjer Seeds

On Thurs­day after­noon, not long after we left the Valve Store’s™ park­ing lot, the Pur­ple Whale crossed the 18,000 mile barrier.

On Sat­ur­day morn­ing, not too far from home, the Emperor passed through the 126,000 mile mark on the way to Augusta.

After los­ing the first game of the series against the Cleve­land Indi­ans, the Red Sox have won the last three games. Is this the start of a turn around like in 2011 or is this just slight blip designed to get my hopes up, so they can drop the next 4 games in a row and crush those hopes?

Started up, went down, still down.
Miata Top Tran­si­tions since 10/24/08: 1136

BMW Drive For Team USA

Today we took the after­noon off from work to help sup­port our Olympic Team. By dri­ving in the new BMW 3 Series, and a cou­ple of its com­peti­tors, a Lexus IS250 and a Mercedes-Benz C250* BMW donated $10 for each of us to the US Olympic Team. Now, all these cars were optioned out so that their list price was about 190% of the cost of our much larger Pur­ple Whale, so the fit, fin­ish and inte­rior quiet­ness of them were also nearly twice as fine. Even though they were still more the size we would have liked to have bought when we were shop­ping last year, their cost kept them off the list.

*The Audi A4 was miss­ing because they didn’t get enough pre-registered dri­vers to bring out every car.

The dri­ving course was an abbre­vi­a­tion of the Susan Komen loop we used to drive and at only 6 miles long didn’t give a chance to wring the cars out and get real famil­iar with them, so all I have are lit­tle snip­pets of pos­i­tives and/or neg­a­tives about each.

We first drove the IS250 and as it turned out it was the car we liked the most. We both loved the seats, very com­fort­able. The nav­i­ga­tion screen was large and where it should be, right in the upper por­tion of the cen­ter stack. Nit picks were win­dow, mir­ror and lock switches were placed awk­wardly for­ward on down on the driver’s door. Back seat legroom was the small­est of the group.

Next we drove the MB C250. This was our least favorite of the group. The seats were hard and flat and Donna never did feel com­fort­able. Very Teu­tonic styling inside and out, so not really to our tastes. The only real plus was the turbo motor kicked butt when pushed, but the lag made it show up long after you wanted the giddy-up.

Lastly we drove the 3 Series and this was the Momma Bear of the group. Dri­ver ergonom­ics were top notch and this is the one I would pick for dri­ving (the IS250 would be the cruis­ing choice.) The exte­rior is tra­di­tional BMW, pleas­ing, but the inte­rior is not to our lik­ing really (the faux wood inte­rior accents were cheap and had an unnat­ural wavi­ness.) Plus, I have com­plained about this in pre­vi­ous BMW dri­ves, but today it seems worse than I remem­ber, the lin­ear­ity of the elec­tronic throt­tle was awful, it almost felt like the Mercedes’s turbo lag.

All in all it was a pleas­ant way to kill a cou­ple hours and we each got a nice lit­tle BMW ball cap (well, really I got two caps, because Donna doesn’t wear hats.)

Started down, went up, still up.
Miata Top Tran­si­tions since 10/24/08: 1137

Who?

While I was stand­ing around wait­ing to talk to some­one before being allowed to drive BMWs and its com­peti­tors, I got into a lit­tle con­ver­sa­tion with a gen­tle­man who was stand­ing there. He was casu­ally well dressed and I assumed a sales­man just stand­ing around wait­ing for the low hang­ing fruit of cus­tomers falling out of the new 3 Series after the drive.

We chat­ted a bit about cars with their rapidly expand­ing use of tech­nol­ogy, espe­cially BMWs. We then traded push but­ton start/proximity key fob sto­ries. Mine was about get­ting out of the car and “lock­ing” it by push­ing the but­ton on the door han­dle, being greeted by a long loud chime and not being both­ered by it. It wasn’t until a cou­ple of days later that I learned that the sound was indi­cat­ing that the car was *not* locked. Turns out that you can not lock the car with a fob inside the vehi­cle. Mine was in my pocket, but Donna’s was in her purse which we were try­ing to lock in the trunk.

His story involved a friend who showed him how easy it was to start his new car, just get in and push the but­ton. His friend then let him get in the car and push the but­ton. Of course it wouldn’t start, his friend was stand­ing out­side a few feet from the car. Ha, ha.

After dri­ving all the cars I had to fill out a lit­tle sur­vey. I thought it was going to be about which car I pre­ferred and why, but it was mostly about my sat­is­fac­tion on how the event was run. Every ques­tion got high marks except the last, it asked did I enjoy meet­ing the Olympic ath­lete? I had to respond that he wasn’t there when we were there. So I asked the girl giv­ing me the sur­vey who was our ath­lete, she said, “Larry Myricks, for­mer Olympic long jumper.” I was too embar­rassed to tell her I had no clue who that was.

This morn­ing while read­ing a the paper I noticed a small photo and arti­cle about the BMW event. There in the photo was the guy I was chat­ting with and, you guessed it, he was iden­ti­fied as one Larry Myricks.

Know­ing what I know now, I kind of wish I could get another chance at that conversation…

Started up, went down, still down.
Miata Top Tran­si­tions since 10/24/08: 1138

It’s Not A TV Remote

It doesn’t use infrared (IR) light, it works on radio waves, there is absolutely no rea­son to take it out of your pocket, turn around and point it at your car to lock the doors.

Patient Zero of the Zombie Apocalypse

Yes­ter­day I had a colonoscopy, and I got cheated and then I got more than I bar­gained for.

The last time I had one of these pup­pies, the 4 to 5 hours of trippy liq­uid­ness post pro­ce­dure almost made up for the crappy (fig­u­ra­tively and lit­er­ally) prepa­ra­tion. But this time they had a new way of putting you to sleep, it is very fast act­ing and very fast in clear­ing your sys­tem. When I woke up in the recov­ery room I was as alert as I was when sit­ting in the wait­ing room before­hand. What a let down.

We went home I had lunch and then I got in bed to catch a nap. I never did get any shut-eye, about 45 min­utes of toss­ing and turn­ing I started to get cold, real cold. I started shak­ing and couldn’t get warm. Donna took my tem­per­a­ture and it read 96.9. She filled the bath­tub with hot water, no cold used at all, and I bet that the water tem­per­a­ture was about 110°. It took almost 3/4 of an hour in the tub before the shak­ing stopped. I stayed in the water about fif­teen min­utes more and when I exited the bath I looked like a cooked lob­ster. After that my tem­per­a­ture was now read­ing 103.

I stayed feel­ing warm the rest of the after­noon and when I still didn’t feel right about 6:00PM we took my temp again and it still read one hun­dred and three! I took an extra strength Tylenol, drank a cold soda, ate some cold jello and after an hour my tem­per­a­ture had “dropped” down to 102.6°

Next stop was the emer­gency room. They took my tem­per­a­ture and of course it read 99.1°. Debated going home, but opted to stay and get checked out more thor­oughly. The ER doc­tor ordered chest and abdom­i­nal x-rays, look­ing for clues. He had sev­eral vials of blood drawn for lab work along with a urine sam­ple. He also had the nurse fill 3 bot­tles about the size of some­thing from a mini bar with blood that were for cul­tur­ing. While we waited for lab results I got a lit­ter of saline in my IV.

The hot bath, the ER visit, the stay­ing at the ER and the ER doc’s test­ing were all done with con­sul­ta­tion with the doc­tor who did my scope.

No one was sure exactly what was going on with me as these we atyp­i­cal of what to expect after this pro­ce­dure. I was in no pain, I just got the chills real bad and then went into the over­heat range. The X-rays were fine, no bowel per­fo­ra­tions and no fluid in my lungs. Urine was fine. My blood work did show that my white blood count was at 18k, with 10–12 being nor­mal. I obvi­ously had infec­tion of some kind, but no one knew what kind. I either had a sim­ple bug picked up from some­where and it was unre­lated to the pro­ce­dure or it was related and could get much worse, plus they wouldn’t know about the blood cul­tures until 12 hours or so later, they wanted to keep me overnight.

We balked at this, I was feel­ing fine. The ER doc called my pri­mary care physi­cian and after a few min­utes the poor schmoe who was on call came in and exam­ined me, he finally agreed to let me go home if I let him admin­is­ter the first doses of two dif­fer­ent antibi­otics right there (plus give me pre­scrip­tions for fill­ing later.) One was a pill, but the other one took 90 min­utes to drip into me via IV. We finally left the ER at 1:30AM this morning.

I have to give a blood sam­ple tomor­row, then see the PCP on Fri­day and see if my white blood cell count comes down. Of course we are still wait­ing to see if one of those blood cul­tures goes mutant, and I become Patient Zero of the Zom­bie Apoc­a­lypse.

Started down, went up, still up.
Miata Top Tran­si­tions since 10/24/08: 1139

House Hunters Tatooine

We have a guide­line here Casa de Bog­a­r­dus that if con­trol of the remote is in pos­ses­sion of one indi­vid­ual and that indi­vid­ual leaves the room, after a period of time the per­son not in actual cus­tody of the remote may take tem­po­rary pos­ses­sion of the device until the orig­i­nal pos­ses­sor returns. Such tem­po­rary pos­ses­sion becomes per­ma­nent after a slightly longer unde­ter­mined period of time.

Donna was watch­ing House Hunters Get­aways* when she left the room for a few min­utes. I was lis­ten­ing to the FRS get­ting their butts kicked by Tampa Bay on the lap­top and after a few more pitches leaned over and grabbed the remote to do a lit­tle surf­ing for back­ground imagery. About 10 chan­nels later I found two droids (not phones) walk­ing across a desert.

*Is it just me or does this show now have more per­mu­ta­tions than CSI or Kar­dashian sisters?

The PCP told me this morn­ing that my blood work was peachy keen and the hos­pi­tal hasn’t called to tell me one of my blood cul­tures turned into a puls­ing, glow­ing broc­coli shaped thing, so I must be fine. I’m going to blame my slight puck­ish­ness on the two antibi­otics I’m tak­ing, because I know for sure that they are respon­si­ble for mak­ing my mouth taste like I’m suck­ing on nickels.

Started up, went down, went up, back down, back up, still up.
Miata Top Tran­si­tions since 10/24/08: 1143

Unintentional Phallic Symbol?

Or is it just me?

I love some Diet Dr. Pep­per and I have grad­u­ated from my one 12oz. can a day to one 16.9 ouncer. In between I would buy an occa­sional 20oz bot­tle out of the machine, but some­times I wouldn’t even fin­ish the whole bot­tle. At a $1.25 it was kind of a waste.

Today after I had poured the last of the half lit­ter bot­tle into my mug and I placed the bot­tle back down on my desk it just looked a lit­tle “dirty.” Maybe because the diam­e­ter of the bot­tle is smaller than the 20oz and then again slightly taller as well, giv­ing it a decid­edly male profile.

P.S. The 24oz bot­tles are even worse.

Settling In

I seem to have set­tled in at an every other pace. Well, that means tonight I should post some­thing and I pretty much have zero to write about, so it’s junk time.

The FRS are play­ing pretty good base­ball right now and have man­aged to get a cou­ple games above .500. They are still in last place in their divi­sion, but every­body is all bunched up and they are only 2–1/2 games behind the lead­ers. This is all pend­ing the out­come of tonight’s game and things are not look­ing too good.

I’m watch­ing the game on MLB.tv using the Roku box. Every day so far they have had a Free Game of the Day and this is the first time the Sox have been on for free. I think it helped that there are only three big league games in total going tonight and the FRS game is the only one in the east­ern time zone. As strange as this seems the worse part of watch­ing the game on MLB.tv is the lack of com­mer­cials. The deaf­en­ing silence for 2 — 3 min­utes while star­ing at the logo is UN-nerving.

The CNC machine I sort of learned to pro­gram and then just recently sort of learned how to oper­ate is in the build­ing. Our main­te­nance is hook­ing up power to it and when they are done the fine folks of Elli­son Tech­nolo­gies will come in and put it in com­plete work­ing order. Then the fun really begins.

My taste buds are still slightly whack after 5 days of being off the antibiotics.…