Yesteryear
One year ago today: August 23, 2024, what do you mean?
Five years ago today: August 23, 2020, banks, business stuff.
Nine years ago today: August 23, 2016, $160,000 per adult.
Random years ago today: August 23, 2010, funny, but insulting.
Good, a blustery day, since the morning was occupied writing one single check. That’s a telling commentary on two subjects. The dismal state of our computerized banking system and the level of detail and security required to process money properly. The focus here is check to a different bank, all of which are photocopied here and logged into two different databases. One, a sequential list of every check written in the previous five years and the up to date balances of each account. You might find it curious that I never electronically transfer locally. I withdraw the cash from bank A and walk it over to bank B.

Money took top place, but have a gander at this box design. Familiar? It is a regular z-box but with a solid lid. Shown here, the lid is cut off the box after it is built. The only cut that fits the lid sliced through the finger hole. Less, the lid is too weak, more and the box is too shallow. This is a result of my original planning not looking far enough ahead. I have an idea, since when closed, this error doesn’t make a difference.
What if I design it so the box cannot be picked up unless the lid is closed? It’s a mistake we’ve all made, scattering contents on the floor. Maybe later. Let’s see who has done their homework. At the bottom of the picture you can see the cut does not go all the way to the end. Why? This box is now finished and I’ve set it aside to completely go over the design shortcomings. Once more, a box that was fun to build took over from my other chores. Now, back t money.
Recent events have caused a real shifting of ballast. It really was not all morning, I played some bass and wrote a bit waiting for updates and such. The point here is the actual writing of the check, with full security features (which include the specially tinted envelopes which aren’t cheap, and the security seal) required 41 minutes. Aren’t security seals ancient and outdated? Yes, that is why it is the position of the seal that is important to the recipient. There are two wall calendars that are marked with the relevant numbers. What a pity the network cannot be trusted with the simplest of tasks, nor the system itself.
And I just discovered copper roofing nails are no longer copper. More like copper clad, and if that atomic-deep coating wears off, solder won’t stick.
The good news is I have another $71 if I want to do anything tomorrow. Today is a bit of an anniversary. The Reb & I met around 2:30 in the afternoon. It was a Sunday. Her and I played a gig six weeks later, the other two big-shot heros never did get a thing off the ground. That’s the Jim & Randy you may see mentioned time and again. They are not important, but music is. They’d heard I could play bass. I’d immediately recognized them as organizational rookies and told them I had been a band manager. They assured me the plan was a working band. The problem is they didn’t have a clue what that entailed.
The rumor is 40% of the US intelligence service will soon be looking for new jobs. A.I. is to systematically “root out the Deep State actors” in a move which pleases most of America. No good news for over a thousand people who work at the big paper plant in Savannah, Georgia. After nearly 100 years operation, they got one month’s notice. The reason this one has my attention is the interviews all of which showed a single common charactertistic. It was that same job-for-life mentality I saw 40 years ago at the phone company. So don’t expect much mercy.
They were a repeat of the bunch who used to laugh at me when I went to evening school for seven long years to get two computer degrees instead of joining them at the stripper bar. That recent comment here that I know people who will always be poor because they don’t ever complain about certain things applies here today. A thousand people who may never have contemplated a life without a paycheck to pay their debts is nothing to me—I’ve worked with 15,000 of them and was the only survivor (financially).
True, the highest seniority people got up to 8 years paychecks out of the company, but there were no more buyout packages. Most left empty-handed. If you’ve followed along, you will recognize the out come of some of my strategies, alas the original computations of 1985 were all on paper and long lost. That is where I’d first used VisiCalc to calculate how much I needed to invest to make 10ȼ per hour. It was not the tiny amount since it was not enough to get ahead. But I was the company lotto collector and calculator of present value (the amount people could borrow now following each negotiated union raise). People could look on the board and see my results.
Ten cents was enough to make a difference and I was astounded how others did not see this. Another advantage was the money was always reinvested so it was always that much less I did not have to take out of my pay. I did a lot of rounding off, but you worked 2,000 hours a year back then, so an annual income of $200 was needed to equal that ten cents. I have historically based my investments on a 7% return, so I knew I needed over $28,000 to achieve such a goal. In 1985, that was impossible.
The rest of this complicated process is spread all over this blog, but this is where I began looking for other means to get that ten cents—and it started me on another path whereby if I could make that $10 per hour, I could effectively retire. Because when it was all said and done, after taxes and expenses, I was living on less than that at the time. And so was everybody else. I make the effort and the attendant sacrifices and am not the one likely to feel sorry for those who did not. In the end, it cost me $19.34 every two weeks.
Picture of the day.
Spike missile, $249,999.99 each.
Remember to use BACK ARROW to return to blog.
Here’s a box I built this afternoon. The rain arrived early and gave me time to learn a few things. I learned when you laser burn a logo on the wood, it creates and inside and and outside you did not have to watch for before. And if you don’t watch, the wrong side has a predilection for making its presence known after you already applied the glue. I learned that the panel wood on this “pencil box” design has to be as thick as possible to keep flat or it’s not easy to fit back in the grooves.
Working with smaller pieces is itself a lesson. You develop a feel for what size of staple fits a thickness and type of wood, as well a knowledge of which brads and staples you can pull and which you are wise to push through. I had a lot of fun building this box, it will be a container for small cables that tend not to say inside an open box when coiled. Note the fancy pull, it is also a carry handle. It is located where I had to add that brace to keep the panel flat. Hey, I told you I was learning.
Later, I got the pencil box finished for use, it has all the defects and still works. For very large pencils that is. This format is not scalable. Get too big and the necessary lumber becomes too heavy. This experiment was a boost because it was made without plans on existing jigs. The reason the last bit of cut on the lid this morning is because that part is done by hand. It you cut it on the table saw, there will always be a bite mark where the wood has pinched The jigsaw makes it easier but it’s still off just a bit.
Smaller pieces have another characteristic. When you glance at them, the difference in dimensions are not as obvious. Couple that with my difficulty seeing pieces on end and I’ve had to take several boxes apart. Today was too gloomy but I did get several other boxes almost done. I’m slowly breaking my habit of working till a task is done before taking a breather. Too long, and a ten minute stop becomes an hour just like that.
I’m grabbing a coffee, but I’m going back out to make one more box, a container for my coin tubes. They come in plastic bags these days that are useless for storage. So just because I feel like it, my coin tubes get the royal treatment. Remember, coin tubes contain 1134 Found Money, and I’ve found $38,000 in my life. (That total is a classification, for example I include tax returns, rebates, and some tips as found money. 1134 is the account number.)
ADDENDUM
Who remembers the angulator? This was the toy I built that eventually let to my purchase of the sextant. Here’s a
picture from June, 2014, there seem a number of rare pictures of this object. Mostly in June and October that year, but I know I had it some years earlier. This makes for a curious history lesson here. And in the process, you get free insights and philosophy.
For example, I knew navigation was or must be complicated. But for me, “complicated” is a sliding scale, as in 0/10 for “needlessly complicated” as in cell phone menus, up to say 10/10 for “nightmarishly complicated, as in financial planning. One major determinant is how many idiots were involved in the process. As you may know already, going on-line is not a lot of help. Fifty posts on easy beginner stuff and nothing on how to actually get the work done. Oh, it’s work.
In those early days I was flying blind. I had the impression sextants must be very expensive. Now I know good map tools are the real cost. It was building the angulator that spurred me into buying the sextant which I only casually know how to use. The connection is that today I found the last pieces of the angulator in a storage case, now deteriorated in the Florida humidty.
You see, when I became interested in navigation, it did not involve a sextant. I spent a month looking at the correct way to read charts, which proved non-challenging. What struck me was the extraordinary accuracy of the readings even on my primitive device. You can see from the photos the scale was just something I hand-drew on the wood, but you could handily read the differences from day to day. I may even build another, now that I have a way to make exact laser markings.

Where do I stand with navigation? A curious hobby, where I can calculate the position of the Sun, which I’ll do for you over my second coffee. I can also do star calculations but I’ve never personally measured one. And I have a thorough understanding of how to plot a line-of-position out in the open ocean, where I never intend to be. I don’t care to get much further into sextants, I threw out the last tarnished pieces of the angulator. To used GMT, Greenwich Mean Time, you must have the date, hours, minutes, and seconds.
But the on-line sources of this information have become enshittified. The A.I. site does not give the seconds, that took a supreme GenX brain-fart to come up with that one. There is even a GMT millennial web page that states it does not have the GMT because “London doesn’t use” it. Duh. Count how many sites before you get to one that actually supplies the information. I locked on this date at 12:21:51, but be careful, that site uses a 12-hour clock, double-duh.
Allowing for my other conditions, such as using my 2014 Almanac, the Sun is at W06°48.2’ by N11°22.1’. (That is -6.7712° and +11.3536° in Googletalk.) As is customary let’s find the nearest town or land to that location. We are in southwestern Mali. It looks to be a patchwork of cleared farms or pastures with no habitable structures at the 100 meter scale, the best available by satellite. I get it, why waste pixels? The nearest mapped town is Bougouni. Let’s zoom on that.
The blurb says the town is a “serene escape into West African culture”. That would, presumably, include the traditional
lithium oxide mine and the many roadway minefields. Travel advisories do not mention the frequent artillery shells that hit hotels, but the UK government site does advise against all but essential travel, very nice of them.
Last Laugh