Yesteryear
One year ago today: May 28, 2025, some damn help.
Five years ago today: May 28, 2021, Airbnb crooks.
Nine years ago today: May 28, 2017, a place in the country.
Random years ago today: May 28, 2008, that crazy lady.
This morning brings the warning I’m not well enough to travel yet. I fed the birdies and stared at the back yard for a while. Then contacted Tennessee and canceled any plans for the next month. No more bouncing between good and bad days, I promise to rest up plenty before even thinking of a long trip. See, I can be reasonable when I have to be. Stick to what I know, music, boxes, electronics, studying, navigation, letters, and baking. Hey, that came out wrong. I meant relaxing. Why, isn’t that how people relax?
There is no direct link with activity and rough days, I mean it hardly could get easier than y’day, and here I am, tired again. This bypass operation is far from easy to get along with. That applies to the Texan up the road as well. Even on a good day, he’s gruff as a grizzly. I’m going to donate him some small motors I won’t ever get to around here. All plans are now on hold for a month and I mean it.
This does not apply to brain exercise. Here’s one of the labels from last day, it says “Alligator Clips”, but as usual when viewing such photos around here, that is not what is being learned. This label is attached with small nails. I learned that glue can take longer than you really want to wait. The label is also printed on a sliced bit of wood as opposed to the laminate strips found lying around like before. The laser handily burns the first layer of laminate, but the heat somewhat weakens the underlying bond.
Other invisible aspects are the software needed to make these labels, which tend to be single layers. The laser interface reveals it is copied software from a much more capable unit, and in this instance, multiple layers. This has to be learned and will try your patience. They try to help by making the layers different colors. This doesn’t help me, as I’m printing letters and numbers, not artistic designs.
Today I learned two things. You can leave all the colors the same for lettering. All the words will still display but the only one that prints is framed by a light grey rectangle with drag handles. The other is that you can move the graphics around once the print is committed. I’ll explain that for my own benefit, it is because I do not have the fancy printing tray.
Thus, each print sequence involves trial and error alignment of the print pattern, making I counterintuitive to even touch the unit once it begins to zap. Multiply that by as many passes as you intend, the laser is precise and the slightest jolt ruins a piece. For light-colored wood, two passes do the best job—but don’t even breathe on the laser assembly. I’ve mentioned long cutting times, so today’s test was how to work meanwhile (that is, do other things instead of waiting on the laser.) I got it. You solidly anchor the laser assembly, secure the wiring work separately, avoid the tmeptation to have them next to each other. I also found the design can be alter and moved without bothering the work in process. Previously, I always waited for the current design to finish.
Here is the excellent sander, when tested it seems to be brand new. I don’t have a dedicated spot for sanding, this might spur me to making one. See how easily I can tempt myself into doing work like this? I’m optimistic I can learn laziness because so many have done that journey before me. Besides, recently my sleep and diet habits have changed, though that was somewhat less than voluntary.
Picture of the day.
Diagram: mountain wave turbulence.
Remember to use BACK ARROW to return to blog.
Continuing with the laser, I took out the small blocks I’ve amassed over time, including Jenga blocks ad pieces of craft wood. Here’s some trials, showing stock phrases that were already in the computer and a Bible phrase. At least I’m learning an awful lot about how trinkets are really made. Then, I get a call from Tennessee to set me back on the path of New Age recovery, or what you’d call it. The Reb called and said stop working and hung up.
How did she know I was packing up thatZoll heart monitor? As LizJohn used to call it, “woman’s indignation”. The Reb knew I packed that thing up two weeks ago. But how did she know I could not lift it until today. Anyway, this is the medical contraption to monitor the heart on-line. Years back I knew my ticker was operating at low efficiency and this time the number they gave was “30”.
This is in the danger zone, so I kept the thing strapped on for over a month. Then came this infection which wasn’t an infection and they zipped me up a second time, however, there was no way to wear the monitor that did not put undue pressure across the new reapair, and it was left off for the third month. Then I wore it again, and here is what I think happened.
The monitoring office got worried about their expensive machine and noticed my heart was not acting up. So they sent me the notice to send it back. Well, I will, today, soon as I marshal the stamina to get it out to the Hundy. And hopefully put an end to that segment of my life. Because at the moment, I barely had enough zip to write that all down. How did she know?
Any screwy news? Sure, ICE detainees refusing to eat unless they get ethnic food. Lt me know how that works out for them. Are we really getting a $250-dollar bill with Trump’s picture on it? Louisiana is likely the next state to cancel racial gerrymandering. An Oklahoma attorney argues you can’t claim self-defense until you are standing inside the house where you reside. Melania seems cleared to sue the journalist Wolff for $1 billion over his statements about her and Epstein. I wish her well, Wolff is MSM.

Seeing several ads for COBOL programmers appearing again, I checked the pay rates. What a joke, $61k to start? That is 1990 pay, but I was curious to see what’s changed since COBOL is now programmed on some type of environment, pardon if I use antiquated terms. The new terms suck, because there is nothing new about COBOL. IBM will produce a “visual” version but I’m about to read the underlying code where the work gets done. It’s been some 50 years since I really looked this deeply at the language. Sure enough, a COBOL program is now called and “implementation”, amazing how people get paid to come up with such nonsense.
My university used IBM equipment so a big part of learning was memorizing design flaws and cursing how that company never got anything right. I can give COBOL two hours for review, that is it, and I will be relying on memories from the 80s. The feature I liked best about COBOL was the rigid variable, and PIC standards for the data. I hope they have not changed that, for it meant all parameters had to be planned in advance, not as you go along or patched up afterward like C+. It’s almost ironic that this aspect of COBOL gave the most trouble to what today I would call the “coder” crowd. I’ll post reports tomorrow and Saturday, I point out that I can already program “enterprise” COBOL, this is a review only.
Ah, but what is “enterprise”? It is something I have always done while programming and did not know later in life what the hell it meant. If I programmed, say a price list, I would include modules for input and output, my specialty being formatted output. Others apparently see these as separate entities—which are probably sold separately, if you follow my dislike of all that.
The guitar player texted, the guy is not a model of efficiency and he still has not got me his top ten list. We are rescheduled for Monday afternoon. I hung some extra curtains in the kitchen so he won’t think I’m totally content with the big mess around here.
ADDENDUM
The Prez reports his eldest grandchild did very well with her solo, adding it was just a few lines. Mind you, about that same age, I did my first piano recital, Beethoven’s Minuet in G, and I know the jolt it puts on the nervous system. Especially since nobody told me if I took lessons I would have to play in public. There was nothing in my upbringing to foretell any type of musical ability, I eventually played three annual recitals, one piece each. The last one made me some enemies. Everybody knew Ingrid was supposed to get top billing.
I just got scolded for not resting up more. But around here rest is not synonymous with doing nothing. A while back I mentioned how my weakened condition allowed ancient injuries to crop back up? That is where I am again. Shoulder pains from old factory jobs, a wrist sprain from grade school, even a bicycle kneecap hurt from my paper route. And of course, recent items like my supraspinatus, rotator cuff, and lower backaches. All mild enough, but enough that I know where they are coming from. So we plan accordingly. Look at me, I’m a wreck.
Last Laugh