Yesteryear
One year ago today: July 1, 2025, a porterhouse this big.
Five years ago today: July 1, 2021, soon, every station.
Nine years ago today: July 1, 2017, NZ, just in case . . .
Random years ago today: July 1, 2014, for profit universities.
Good luck finding the Franklin library. It is on Columbia (almost a mile south of the old downtown) but there is no number or address on the building. There's sign for the high school next door, but that's it. Fortunately, for the few of us left who know what a library looks like, I saw such a building. You drive around the block either direction and enter the building from the side street. I tried to bring up a map but all I got was an offer to turn the wallpaper into a jigsaw. To think Apple has fallen so far. It is 1314 Columbia but access is on Granbury Street, duh. Franklin is another of those towns designed by drunks where the streets run east-west, unlike the rest of the universe. But I did get there, and as I've said for years, Tennessee has excellent libraries. This one was typical, a parking lot choked full cars, but not that many people inside.

Tennessee. Until I can get time and access, just read the addendums. If silver continues to drop, I may step back in. My target price is $48/oz to buy. Copper is now $6 per pound, and my wire-stripping device arrived. It's hand-cranked but I wanted on just to test the process. It slices the insulation, so you can easily strip longa lengths than by just knicking one end. I have several tools showing up, with luck when I get back to my editing software, you might geet a break from box pictures for a bit. Look, there's one now, an intentionally blurry snap of the Reb with the pooch in the park.
Another tool arrived, this one will be put to work pronto--assuming that it works as advertised. The dowel maker. The iMac has no intuitive wasy to edit photos (I said intuitive) so expect some pretty random photos, and don't forget to cheack back on all "vacation" posts for things that got missed. The GPS kind of gave me an unexpected tour or the historical part of town they don't show on the tourist brochures. Thanks to my place in Florida, I was eaily familiar with the architectural period.
I did not get much down time here, it was a lot of loose ends but this is the home stretch in some ways. I don't think I've ever spent any real time in Franklin, but I like the way the town is squeaky clean in quite a number of nice ways, including culturally and socially. It is nice to see people walking quietly along again. Try that in a big town.
New construction everywhere. The place is having a mini-boom. It also means the end of many of the picturesque green patches that make the area nice to drive through. Like Florida, they are making the mistake of suddenly inject five hundred new dwellings into an area withouyt any improvement in the infrastructure. Franklin will be a mini-Miami in less than ten years, mark my works. Enjoy the break, I'm heading back to Florida soon as I can.
The government offices are all behind schedule with long waiting times, so I'll make the appointments, which is what they always wanted to force on the public. Then their work load can be slacked off institutionally.
Picture of the day.
Khor Fakkan.
Remember to use BACK ARROW to return to blog.
The Reb wanted a break. Ah, great, I'm good at that, a skill I honed for years on the job. So she got her pick of the movies, and it was a cartoon. Now, I know how that sounds, but she chose "Toy Story 5", which at least I had heard of. I don't want to be attending any under-advertised films. You already know we don't much go to movies any more except together. Don't mess with tradition. Yes, we made it to the theater, where they acted outside like the auditorium was full blah-blah, it was maybe 40% occupied, that is, there were all kinds of empty seats. They wanted to shunt us the the front row ten feet from the screen, telling us those were the only available seats. We found that an emotional support doggie lets you kind of take any of the vacant spots you might like.

Heads up, according to the Reb this version (she's seen all, I've seen none) is not as much a comedy as before. The room had reclining chairs, so I nodded of a couple times. But I get it, the theme is anti-tech. It's true in a way, kids that play with toys would naturally have better imaginations. This movie portrays the addctive nature of interactive media. It is about a girl is ostracized because all her friends have the latest tech toys. The Reb has an affinity for animation, where to me they are cartoons. Afterward, we took a stroll with the doggie, opting for a bite at McAllister's. It's kind of Mexican but without the authencicity. Also. Chooksie found something on the floor and ate it, then before long barfed up. It wasn't bad, but the staff took forever to show up with a mop. My concern was, of course, only the doggie.
Before we move on, this is a picture of a "photographer's box". I kind of looked askew at it, the purpose is general studio use. It's for props, lights, and I suppose for Tom Cruise to stand on when he's near Nicole Kidman. Anyway, the Golden Ratio dimensions caught my eye, so I asked what the price tag was. Gulp, $65? and it was sealed so you could not even use it for storage during off season.
The Reb heading back to the studio, we concluded a long discussion by concluding we have to wait and see. That must sound like real progress, but it's still wait and see. I e-mailed the Kaiser and we headed over to Rosie's for a few. He's a military buff, you know how rare it is to find anyone who has delved how drones have changed warfare? Because that means they will ultimately change everything. It was a sweltering mid-Tennessee summer night but the beer was cold. We were three hours just catching up on details, one being that his truck is out of commission and, like so many Nashville musicians, works more that one part-time job. He's been on the circuit long enough to live through a demographic change in the clubs. Like myself, he's seen the clientele morph, but he's also dealing with a new generation of owners. Usually the sons of the owners. Yes, this makes a difference.

We went over this in some detail as it appears a change in the music model for club entertainers. What happens in Tennessee will eventually happen in Florida. I noticed the Karaoke singers at the Pond were almost pushing a style of music on the crow, making my act seem almost a relief. Dang it, I had just got off the highway and forgot my camcorder in the van that time. He's getting a similar effect, but his gig triangle (Knoxville-Chattanooga-Memphis) is five times larger. The dicision is that if I return to Nashville in a reasonable amount of time, we will either go see some live entertainers he know, or maybe attend a couple jams to play our oldest material.
If I did not say, the Karaoke people at the Pond that same night were terrible and one trio, you could tell, would go from club to club pushing their material. That never works, it never will, but they never stop trying. Meanwhile, here's the Kaiser at a lighter moment during our meetup. Honestly, we really were talking lots of serious stuff, like solving world problems. Besides, this was Rosie's. Other than the floozie with the tattoos on the last stool before the men's room, there were no women in Nashville, much less the outskirts.
ADDENDUM
This is about my 3.5" floppy disk reader:
I have a USB powered floppy disk reader. It shows up on the disk menu, but it will not read even the filenames. And Win 11 cmd does not recognize the disk drive itself, or just displays an icon that does nothing. I’ve got the parts to build a 386, but what a hassle. It’s a few lines of code in the kernel to run real DOS, but the bastards had to mess with that. They just could not leave well enough alone. They have a degenerate obsession with proving to themselves they are smart or something.
The snag here is that those disks were the standard for years and there are tens of millions of them out there. What’s more, they contain priceless information and files that are untainted by embedded millennialware and worse, cloud stupidware. Some of the 3.5s I kept have printouts of my best COBOL and FORTRAN program dumps and now, with going through hoops, I cannot access them. I’ll get it, I’m just saying these punks deserve every bit of hardship that is surely coming their way.
The period 1992 through 2003 there was not journal. But these disks contain tons of data and information of the day that I had intended to post one file at a time. I even have the original installation disks for both the operating system and the programs, which are now called apps. I only kept around 60 disks, but in those days there was very little file overhead written to disk, so it’s mostly good stuff. The disks are pretty damn old, but kept dry and seem in great shape.