to hear a mockingbird

When I went out back with Bode this morning was startled to feel the mildness of the air, it was 55 deg F at 6:30 am.

Our walk yesterday afternoon was nice, although it was cloudy and drizzling rain, it was warm. I put an unlined nylon jacket over my usual sweater and was plenty warm. It felt strange to be out without a parka on. I was too ill to take Bode out on Sunday, so was especially good that we had a nice walk.

It wasn’t a particularly good photo day, but the listening was wonderful. The birds are back and fired up with returning spring. We were headed back home when I heard it. There was a robin call, then a chickadee, then a cardinal, then a blackbird, just a bit louder and slightly different style than the “original artist” bird’s song. I looked around carefully and saw the mockingbird sitting on the peak of a roof. I whistled back to it, and it replied. Still wasn’t sure but then it flew upward and displayed the white windmill wings and I knew its species.

There weren’t mockingbirds around here (Western Pennsylvania) when I was growing up. I first heard one while visiting a cousin in Macon County Illinois in the 1970s. I think that was then the northern limit of their range.

Is this what living with global climate change will be like, noticing subtle changes that most people don’t pay attention to?

Posted in General | Comments Off on to hear a mockingbird

Gadget test

Posted in Technical | Comments Off on Gadget test

web parable

Ah, my child, it is well that you ask “Are not a word processor and a text editor the same thing?”

It is like unto two women who bought eggs. The first woman came home from the grocery store and put the carton of eggs into the refrigerator. The second woman, feeling she was being clever, put her eggs into a pan of water and hard boiled them all.

The next morning at the first woman’s house, her dear husband (DH) came in from shoveling snow and said, “My it is cold today. Could we make pancakes for breakfast?”

She answered, “Sure, I got eggs and milk yesterday. I would appreciate some help though.”

DH said, “Sure, thing!”

Their precious child (PC) came into the kitchen and sniffed the air.

“What are we having for breakfast?”

“Pancakes,” mom and DH said together.

PC then asked, “Could I have an fried egg over easy too?”

Mom replied, “Sure! You are growing so fast that I bet you need some extra protein.”

So they all sat down together and enjoyed breakfast.

PC then said, “Mom, my teacher asked us to bring some brownies for our bake sale tomorrow.”

“We have everything we need, lets do it together after you finish your homework tonight.”

At the second house, the woman took a cup of water she heated in the microwave oven and dissolved some instant coffee powder in it. She was just getting ready to crack and peel her hard boiled egg when DH came in from shoveling snow.”

“Gosh it is cold out today. Could we have pancakes for breakfast this morning?”

“Does this look like a restaurant? Anyway, we only have hard boiled eggs.”

“I am cold, it would be nice to have something hot for breakfast sometimes.”

“What, is your arm broken? It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to boil water and there is instant coffee and hot chocolate mix in the cupboard.”

DH put on his work clothes and stopped at a fast food restaurant on the way to work.

A word processor program takes the plain text that you type in and turns it into something else, a binary file that is optimized for printing. A text editor preserves what you type in its original form. The reason this is an advantage is that sometimes you want put what you wrote into your blog, not print it. Heck, you can even write source code with your text editor! (Oops, that is what text editors were invented to do.)

It is just like with eggs, it is a lot easier to turn an egg into an omelette than it is to turn an omelette into an egg!

So, what do you do? For my part, I gave up trying to keep up with Microsoft when they ditched QuickBASIC and left me and a number of my Macintosh user clients in the lurch. Yeah, I admit it, I am a programmer, started punching cards for a FORTRAN IV class using an IBM mainframe in 1969.

I know, people look at you like you are crazy when you say you don’t use Word. “But ain’t Mikker Soff standerd?”

I started managing an electronic bulletin board for a community network before the web was generally available, like the early 1990s. It was hosted on a UNIX workstation. That is when I got acquainted with BBEdit, which my supervisor provided along with a PowerMac 6100. People would bring in information they wanted to post in the form of Word documents. What I did then is pretty much what I do now:

1. Get the person to use Save As to make the document into [mostly] plain text.

2. Look at the text and try to discern patterns. Once you get used to a particular writer’s habits, this becomes easier.

3. Use Find and Replace to correct the common nasties, like typographers quotes, accented vowels, and non-breaking spaces.

4. Use the BBEdit “Zap Gremlins” command, under the Text menu, to turn any remaining non-text characters into a bullet or whatever is convenient and readily visible.

5. Replace the bullets and read over the text again doing any final touchups.

6. Use the “reflow text” command, also under the Text menu, to create proper paragraphs if the person who saved the file as text added hard line breaks.

7. Save the file, just in case, then copy and paste the text into your WordPress editor (blog) and apply any needed formatting or start to convert it to HTML.

So to summarize, if you know you will be printing and only printing, go ahead and use a Word Processor. If you are preparing material for the web, use a text editor. TextEdit comes with Macintosh systems and most Windows machines have Notepad or Wordpad. You know why? Because, tah-dah, computers and the web run on PLAIN TEXT.

Posted in Rants, Technical | Comments Off on web parable

multinational tea bags

used Lipton tea bag

It has been a while since I had a good rant, so here goes.

This started with a compromise. I haven’t been feeling the best since early last fall. On top of everything else, I didn’t seem to be properly sensing the flavor of the loose, single estate teas (usually mail ordered from Upton) that I have enjoyed for many years. So, I decided to economize and buy popular brands of bag tea carried in the grocery stores.

The last box of Lipton had a sample of one of their Pyramid teas. It was pleasant enough, but not my proverbial cup of tea. Guess I am still an environmental chemist deep inside, so in addition to the flavor I also wondered about the packaging materials. The mesh bag and string appeared to be nylon, and the tag was some kind of plastic.

I am an amateur gardener and also committed to minimizing the amount of waste that goes into landfill, so I run a compost bin. This morning after checking my email, I fired up Safari went to the international Lipton site to seek information. They conveniently provided the URL on the outside of the sample wrapper.

OK, I guess you can tell where this is heading, a rant about web site design. The appearance was pleasant with lots of space, but they made me wait until a big splash screen image downloaded. Yes, I am still on dial-up. No, I don’t see paying for a constant high speed connection when I only need to spend an hour or two on the internet per day.

Once it finished, there was one of those Flash style drop down menus to pick your country. Then there was another wait while more graphics downloaded. I read over the material and located the questions about the product part, then read through two screens worth of FAQ, none of which at all addressed the question I wanted to ask.

So, I took the “none of the above” link to reach the feedback form page.

Now, I can see why the government and employers might need my date of birth, but why does Unilever consider it so important?

OK, I filled out the entire thing, then hit the submit button. No pride…

Contact Us

Thank you for visiting the Lipton® Tea web site.

If you would like to speak to a live representative
please call us at:
1-888-LiptonT (1-888-547-8668),
Monday – Friday, 8:30a.m. – 6:00p.m. EST.

IF THIS IS A MEDICAL OR PRODUCT SAFETY EMERGENCY,
PLEASE CALL 1-800-745-9279.
This number is available 24 hours a day / 7 days a week.

Otherwise, please submit the form below so we can respond to your question or concern.

If you are reporting a problem with one of our products please be sure to include your address and a telephone number where you can be reached during the day so we can contact you for further information.

LIPTON Teas naturally contain protective antioxidants.
Hydration is key to maintaining a healthy lifestyle. Tea is a great tasting way to get your necessary daily fluid intake.

* indicates required information
E-mail Address:*

Prefix: Mr. Mrs. Ms. Miss
First Name:*

Last Name:*

Address:*

City:*

State:*

Zip Code:*

Birthdate:*

Daytime Phone Number:
– – ext:
Evening Phone Number:
– – ext:
UPC Code:
Manufacturing Code:

Enter your question/comments here:*

Helping you with your everyday needs is important to us. Therefore, from time to time, we may wish to send you information, samples or special offers that we feel may be of interest to you regarding Lipton® Tea, or other complementary brands from Unilever or other carefully-selected companies. If you would rather not opt-in to receive such information, please uncheck the box below. For more information to remove yourself from future contact, please visit our privacy policy.

Yes, I would like to receive such information and offers.
Yes, but I would only like to receive such information
and offers from Lipton® Tea.

Being [well] over 50 is funky enough, but I got an error that I needed to enter a valid date of birth!

I didn’t think they needed that anyway, so I made up several birth dates and tried to submit the form. Same thing, it didn’t like any of them! I picked them from month, day and year drop down lists too, so it wasn’t a typo thing.

This is the direct URL http://www.liptont.com/contact_us/contact_us.asp if you want to give it a try.

The graphics stuff is more often an ego statement by the designer who took all the Adobe training anyway. Why did they go to all that trouble, then publish a non-functional form?

Later:

It was bugging me, so I went back with FireFox and tried again. This time I got an error message saying that I couldn’t use a double quote (nor other HTML tag characters) in the message box. Once I removed them, it “took” — there I go using double quotes again….

Escaping such characters requires adding a single line in the Perl CGI scripts that I have used.

I still think requiring people to view all the marketing material before you can get to information is nasty. It is like if you were passing a store and found a wallet on the sidewalk, you go in and have to watch a promotional video before they will tell you the location of the Lost and Found department.

I would have liked to have seen at least one thing concerning the health of the earth amongst all the stuff promoting “hydration” and antioxidants.

Posted in Gardening, Photos, Rants, Technical | Tagged , , , , , , | Comments Off on multinational tea bags

more seasonable temperatures

Allegheny River in winter
This photo is from yesterday around noon, it was windy but beautiful. It was in the mid-40s yesterday, then in the 30s today but it felt warmer with no wind.

I got up early yesterday and then was pretty much worn out by mid-afternoon. Dozed off several times during The News Hour, then crawled into bed at 7. Have pretty much given up on evening activities. Everything was just where I left it when I got up this morning.

Posted in General | Comments Off on more seasonable temperatures