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Monthly Archives: January 2010

A bit of childhood

Going through my collection of HO trains, I spotted a bit of my childhood I thought was lost forever, my favorite Matchbox car!

Using my little, home made light tent, I was able to take a decent photo.  You can see how simple, even lighting really helps macro shots.  It was a favorite toy of mine, I remember playing with it for hours.  I am glad Glenn will be able to enjoy it as well.

 

Posted by on January 30, 2010 in Photos

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The Challenger

24 years ago the Space Shuttle Challenger disintegrated shortly after it was launched. I was 11 going on 12 years old at the time. I was sitting in an English class in 6th grade at the time. I still remember the look of shock the teacher had that day when she told us what happened. I guess it is like you will always remember where you were when you first heard about the World Trade Center on 9/11 or when Kennedy was shot, or where you where when man first stepped in the moon. I didn’t get to see it live, since I was in school and most of my siblings were home sick that day. It was a sad day for Americans, and a sad day for space exploration.

Today, it is used as an engineering and management example of what not to do and how important communication is in an organization. I think most problems stem from communication issues. 9/11? Lack of communication between Federal agencies. Marriages breaking up? Lack of communication between the partners. Mars Lander failure? Lack of communication between the designers for what system of measurements was used. Hurricane Katrina? Lack of communication with FEMA and the inability to warn the residents in timely matter. In this day and age of world wide communication, it is the lack of proper interpersonal skills and clear understanding that gets us.

Unfortunately, this mistake gets repeated over and over and I really don’t know if it will ever be fixed. I think it is really part of human nature. It could be because we evolved to deal with relatively small groups and our genetic heritage just fails us when we pass a certain point of people. Where I work, word of mouth is so much faster than formal e-mails it is not even funny. It was like that at my last job as well. I would be willing to bet it is a pretty common problem not just in American culture, but a world wide phenomenon in corporate culture with companies with over 15 people.

So, in th end, if we just communicated more effectively, a lot more people would be alive right now. Thank you for teaching us an important lesson, flight crew of the Space Shuttle Challenger, but I doubt it will really sink in for a long time.

 

Posted by on January 28, 2010 in Social

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Kids these days

A recent article highlighted the fact that among youth today, if they are not awake or in school, they are looking at a screen or consuming media. Why is this a problem? Well, starting at a glowing screen can really lead to obesity (yes, I watched a lot of TV and computers as a youth, and I am obese) and it really does not help your interaction with the real world. I think a big problem will be when the kids who are used to being to text, type, view all the time try go without is going to be a very hard adjustment. When you ‘go out’ now, you are really not disconnected from anything, to the point that you may physically be somewhere, but mentally, you are connected to cyberspace.

In my best old man voice: When I was a kid, when you went out, you were out. You really, truly were disconnected from the digital world. Heck, there barely was a digital world. If your phone rang, it was back in your house, and you had to come home to your answering machine. If you wanted to make a phone call on the road, you had to find a pay phone and hope you had some change. If you had the honor of having e-mail via a BBS or Quantum link, you had to go home, dial in, and check it. There was no world wide web. If you wanted to research a paper, you had to go the library and look at paper books or encyclopedias. If you wanted news, you had to wait until 6 or 10 o’clock at night or wait for the morning paper. Was it better back then? I don’t know. I know it was a lot simpler. Now, I can barely buy a phone without a data plan.

I think being really disconnected from time to time really separates my generation from the one currently going through the school systems of this fine nation. It is going to be a hell of a culture shock when the kids have to work for the Gen X’ers who will be ruling (and are ruling) the corporate world. Yes, we saw the digital age be born, but we also know what is still important. Face time. Real, adult verbal communication with controlled body language, neat clothes, and a firm handshake. Guess what kids, my parents and grandparents did it this way, and I don’t think it is going to change. That iPhone, Blackberry, etc. turn it off or you are going to lose your job. When you are at work, they expect you to work (most of the time.) I accept the fact everyone goofs off, but with the super connectedness of this world, it is almost constant.

Do I want to go back to the way things were? No, but there needs to be a happy medium, or today’s youth is going to be really messed up. I know I have to work at not being on a computer or screen every day. As soon as I turn off the screens and just talk, play, build, or read a book, I am so much happier. There are things I like, but things that I hate. I like the safety of a cell phone, but I hate how I can’t really get away from it, unless I turn it off or leave it at home. I like how we have a world of information at our fingertips, but I hate all the distractions of being on-line. As a bit of retroness, I am using my netbook like an old fashioned world processor, since I purposely disconnect it from the Internet when I write blog entries. I type with no distractions. This whole post took less than 15 minutes to type, with proofreading, since I have no distractions. I refuse to get a smart phone unless I have no choice. What I really want is a cell phone with some decent voice and long battery life, but unless I stick with my ‘grandpa’ phone, I will not get that in a new phone. I love my GPS, but I still know how to read maps and use a compass or the sun and street numbers.

In the end, I am sure some youth will turn out fine, but I think they will not be as happy as the generation before for many reasons. I know I will work as hard as I can teach Glenn the importance of learning of how to fix things and building things. The importance of being outside and enjoying nature.  The importance of  the warmth of the sun against your face and the bite of the air on a cold winter’s day. The importance of knowing the value of money and the how hard it can be to earn. The importance of simplicity and enjoying what you have. Kids brought up this way will be the achievers. The ones who do nothing but stare at screens will ask you if you want fries with that or will be living in their parents’ basement until they are 45.

If you don’t agree with what I have to say, too bad. It’s my blog and you don’t pay the bill for it, I do. :-P

 

Posted by on January 27, 2010 in Family

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Cyberphreak.com in 2010

As a reversal of recent times, you will be seeing a lot more content on Cyberphreak.com.  Now that I have stopped using a website that shall remain nameless, I have more time to concentrate on my blog, my family, and everything else that really matters.  Expect more technology news, musings, photography and just more in general.  It is nice being able to type something more than 140 or 250 characters.

 

Posted by on January 27, 2010 in General Comments

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The iPad

Wow, what a really pointless device. It looks like a giant iPod touch. Wait, it IS a giant iPod touch. Runs the same software, single tasks. (Let me digress, single tasking in 2010 is totally unacceptable.) and starts with 16GB of storage. My not the greatest netbook has 10 TIMES the storage, a fast processor, can can multi task as good as any desktop since it runs desktop software. Oh, and my netbook can display flash sites correctly and has a real keyboard. It also only weighs about a pound more than the iPad and costs a couple of hundred less.

I am sure the Apple lovers will snatch it up, but is just seems so impractical. You can’t put it in your pocket, you can’t type a novel on it, and you can’t watch Flash videos on it. You end up with a fast, but limited web surfing computer that is not a portable as an iPhone, but not as practical as a netbook. I guess the real advantage is that is will make a half way decent e-book and it runs existing iPhone/iPod touch apps. It looks like a great way to make money at Apple, but not a great overall device. The iPhone is much more practical, sad to say, at least you can use it as a phone.

But, hey, even I am talking about it, so it has succeeded in getting our attention, however short lived it will be.  By the way, the name sounds like a feminine napkin.  Just saying.

 

Posted by on January 27, 2010 in Computers, Hardware

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