Link of the Day: Asian Teen Has Sweaty Middle-Aged-Man Fetish
Quote of the Day: “There’s no point in being grown up if you can’t be childish sometimes.” – Doctor Who
Spam of the Day: “Plastic Surgery in a Bottle!”
Link of the Day: Asian Teen Has Sweaty Middle-Aged-Man Fetish
Quote of the Day: “There’s no point in being grown up if you can’t be childish sometimes.” – Doctor Who
Spam of the Day: “Plastic Surgery in a Bottle!”
So, last year, I purchased a used 2003 Saab 9-5 Linear sedan. I bought it out-right, with money I got from my mom’s life insurance, for $8200 (that was with splitting the cost of a brand-spanking-new Bosch OEM alternator with the Macedonian man who owned the European Import-specialist used car lot). I thought that was a pretty good buy, and I’d tried to do as much homework on it as I could (my car-buying process was a several week long affair, with a LOT of time spent online reading and researching, and a few days dedicated to going to dealerships and driving representative sample cars of all of the makes I was considering). The maintenance records looked excellent, CarFax report was good, and I even tried to have a professional inspection done on it (with less than satisfactory results, but that’s another story of woe and frustration altogether).
I like my car. It’s pretty, it’s comfortable, it’s reasonably quick, and it gets pretty decent gas mileage (22-24ish city, 33-34 highway). It’s definitely the nicest vehicle I’ve ever owned, and I like some of the Swedish Saab quirks it has. It’s no Mercedes-Benz, but still a nice car.
Less than two weeks after buying it, I had it in the shop at the Saab (/Cadillac/Hummer) dealership in Fort Wayne. Two trips in there to fix various issues – expensive labor for rewiring work in the rear to get all the lights back there working properly, a new Direct Ignition Cassette, new battery, new spark plugs, a couple of other minor things I don’t remember now. $1100 more sunk into the car. Irritating, but I still had money left from the insurance. It was supposed to be in “great shape” other than those issues I had fixed.
Everyone who’s looked at the car in any professional mechanical capacity has said the same things about it, more or less: “It’s in great shape.”
A few weeks before I allowed my life to fully implode in Huntsville, my car developed an irritating and inconvenient problem: the battery wouldn’t hold a charge. I thought something was draining it that shouldn’t be when it was turned off. The battery was less than a year old, it COULDN’T be the problem. After getting jump-starts twice (once from a friend who drove from the other side of town, once from my next door neighbor with whom I’d never even spoken before), I paid what was, at the time, very precious money for a low-end “jump box” from Wal-mart. It got entirely too much usage.
A little more than halfway back on the drive from Huntsville to Midland, a new concern popped up: the Engine Malfunction light switched on, and stayed on. Then over the next couple of weeks, it’d go on and off relatively randomly. Great. So, I needed to find somewhere I could get my Saab worked on. I thought it should be no problem, my dad has a friend (for whom he does bookkeeping and tax preparation) who is a mechanic who specializes in Imports. His shop is even named “World Class Automotive.” As it turned out, he does pretty much just Japanese imports, and domestic makes. No European stuff, and definitely not Swedish. No Saab dealer anywhere in West Texas, short of El Paso. DFW or maybe Austin are the closest Saab dealers. Bloody Wonderful.
It turns out, it’s pretty damn hard to find someone to work on a Saab in West Texas. When I bought the car, never for a second was, “I wonder how hard it will to get it worked on in Midland, Texas,” an item of thought or consideration. After some calling around and chasing down referrals, we found one company that said they could scan the Saab’s computer and who worked on Saabs: Littlefield Automotive. We took the car in, they took entirely too long to figure out what the deal with it was (bad thermostat and temperature sensor) and then informed us they’d have to order the parts, and that it would take “a couple of days” to get them in. I got my car back (paid for by my Dad, who, I am certain, is keeping a penny-accurate tally somewhere), and we were going to come back in after they got the parts in – presumably the next week.
A week and a half later, we finally get a call informing us the parts are in. This is the week before Christmas week. Well, trying to get it worked on with the shortened week before the Thursday Christmas just seemed impractical. The next week, with a similar situation with New Year’s Eve/Day, also seemed impractical. Now, I’d started to notice a concerning sort of grinding noise coming from the front wheels when braking, or at low speeds even when not braking sometimes shortly before Christmas. I didn’t think too much of it, but wanted to have them see what was wrong when I took it in. The next week after New Year’s week? Nope, my dad had a trip to Corpus Christi that week, which he left for on Thursday, so I needed the car that weekend too. Finally, Wednesday the next week after that, I get the car in to Littlefield’s. Like, 3 1/2 weeks or so, closeish to a month, after the parts finally arrived.
That concerning grinding noise? Oh, that was my front brakes being almost entirely gone. Know what it costs to replace the parts of a Saab’s front disc brakes? I had no idea. I know now with a painful clarity. $134 for a break pad set. $119 each, x2, for Discs (aka rotors). $144 each, x2, for front calipers. $12 for brake fluid. $672 in parts alone. Tack on $391 for labor (including labor for putting on the parts from before that were on order that we’d already paid for), EPA fees, and tax . . . and there’s an $1131 front brake job. 3 weeks pay for me, with what I’m currently making. That effectively delays me a month or thereabouts on any hopes of getting my own apartment. That’s pushing me into March (possibly late March) to move with a reasonable buffer established, maybe longer if more expenses mount up to surprise me. *le sigh*
In addition, I know that my rear brakes (which were essentially working overtime with my front brakes gone) will need attention fairly soon. I’m hoping I can put off having to buy new tires (and possibly new wheels with them – 2 of my alloy wheels have bends in them which I don’t know if they’re reparable with any cost-effectiveness vs. replacing them) until next year, or at least late this year.
Next time, I’m buying Japanese.
Video of the Day: Fireworks Factory Exploding
Spam of the Day: “Have you heard of tapeworm eggs to lose mass?”
Link of the Day: Top 10 Superbowl Ads of All Time
Quote of the Day: “The things that we love tell us what we are.” – Saint Thomas Aquinas
Link of the Day: Uranium Ore on Amazon.com
The comments are great.
So, after finally getting my car back (more on that later), today was the first day in a week I’ve been able to enjoy simple things like, “driving myself to work in my own car.” Another benefit was being able to go somewhere for lunch without having to beg a ride from a co-worker.
Sure, I could have gone with a quick, cheap ($2-3) microwave meal, and just picked up something from Albertson’s or Wal-mart. But being able to go someplace after a week of not, I wanted to go eat somewhere. Ahh, but where? That’s the vexing question. I mulled things over for probably an hour and a half, and still didn’t know exactly where I was going when Ifinally left for lunch about 1:30 this afternoon.
“I’m going . . . somewhere,” I said to James and Corey as I headed for the stairs.
Where I ended up, was someplace I’d been considering about, and more or less opted for simply because I’d given it a little more consideration than anywhere else: Murray’s Deli. James had done a mini-review of Murray’s a couple of weeks back on his blog , and he mentioned he liked getting burgers there. So . . . what the hell.
It was a good choice. I had a Murray’s Best Burger, with lettuce, bacon, and swiss cheese, curly fries (oy, greasy, but pretty good) and . . . a pint of Shiner Bock – on draft. Yes, that’s right – Murray’s has Shiner on draft. I was sold right there when I saw that. I will be returning many times to their establishment.
I upgraded the site’s blogging software, WordPress, to 2.7 last week. It broke some stuff I’d previously configured along the way, and I hated the colors. I tried some other themes, and just didn’t like much else. I’d gone through a lot of trouble to end up picking the K2 theme in the first place, and so I kept coming back to trying to get K2 to work again. Something with the WordPress Theme Generator theme I made (which didn’t quite work as I was trying to get it to work anyway) screwed things up, and made it so that every time I tried to change to another theme, it wouldn’t, and it’d stay with the Theme Generator theme.
Eventually, I just went for the blunt approach and deleted the bloody theme. Oh, THEN everything starting working properly. Now after some tweaking with the css a little (hastily, this thing’s master css is complicated) it’s got tolerable colors. Not the final ones, by any means, but it’s good enough to actually use now for a bit. As I texted to a friend today, I might actually start posting again now – rather than messing with the theme.
So, yesterday at work, while I was searching for stuff on either a problem with a Lenovo Tablet I was working on, or on general programming stuff, I came across a site that I’ve found a lot of enjoyment out of. It may have to end up on my list of regular-read webcomics.
It’s called Basic Instructions – Your all-inclusive guide to a life well-lived. I really enjoy the sort of analytical, off-the-cuff approach it has. Here’s one example of one that struck me as something I can relate to: How to Analyze a Song
Maybe with my new job (I started Tuesday as Tech Support for http://www.dynamictherapysolution.com/ ) I’ll actually get around to posting on this thing with something approaching regularity again.
Friday, the 4th of July; Indepdenence Day. What did I do for it? Nothing like what I’d have really preferred to . . . but altogether, it wasn’t a bad day anyway. I had a stressful phone call with Maria . . . that whole situation is complex and I’m still not sure how to deal with it, what to do. I’m just sort of starting to get used to getting along without her, and then talking to her again on the phone really sort of stressed me out.
So, after ending the conversation with her, paying my rent (well, dropping a check which I hope is for the right amount into the dropbox at the apartment complex office), I decided I really just needed to get out. I wasn’t sure for what, exactly, but maybe a movie. Kung Fu Panda looked good . . . I could go see it at the Rave . . . or I could wait until 5 and see it on IMAX at the Space & Rocket Center . . . or at the same time as the showing at the Rave, I could catch it at the Monaco. Well, I hadn’t managed to see anything at the Monaco yet, and I hadn’t been to Bridge Street yet either, so I headed off in that general direction. I was still a bit stressed, and just wanted to get out, enjoy things, even if I was perhaps a bit reckless. So, my car’s a nice car, it’s got some nice features I don’t use much. Like Sport mode. I popped on Sport mode and just drove, not really knowing precisely what the best way to get there was. Let’s say I had a rather roundabout route, and if there’d been more cops around, I’d possibly have been busted for breaking the speed laws a lot.
So, I eventually make it to Bridge Street, and get an “ok” but not great parking spot (though being the 4th of July, as I later really realized, I really should have been happy to get any parking spot even semi-close). I walk up to the Monaco, gazing around a little bit to see just a bit of the shopping center, and head on in.
Damn, but the Monaco is nice. I’ve judged pretty much all movie theaters on the Harkins Standard. In the Phoenix area, there’s a (well, there used to be, I don’t know if there is still now or not. I’ve not consulted the Guru Google to find out, either.) family-owned theater chain called the Harkins Theaters. They were nice, all their employees dress in black pants and shoes and tuxedo shirts with cummerbunds, and they have a gourmet concession bar. Great picture, great sound, great seats. Well, the Monaco either ties or beats the Harkins theaters on every front except the concession bar. Just pretty much standard theater concessions – Pepsi products, slushies, hot dogs, nachos, popcorn, candies, bottled water, energy drinks. But man, the rest of the place is damned impressive. Employees are in all black (not tuxedo wear, but still slick), the place is -very- nice . . . oh, and they have both the Prive’ VIP theaters, and The Scene, their own full-blown small club/bar.
So, I saw Kung Fu Panda. Not a bad film. Enjoyable. I kinda wish I’d looked up the voice actors before seeing it, I think it would have added to my appreciation of the movie.
After seeing Kung Fu Panda, I wandered out into Bridge Street (and into rain of varying degrees). I didn’t really have any particular aim. Just wandering around, checking out shops, watching people, admiring beautiful women and girls (always on the lookout for that just barely possible chance hot girl by herself that looked like she might be the gamer/goth/alternative type). I saw a few of the hot alt girl sorts, but they were invariably with some guy (or guys). Some interesting ink on the backs of some girls. A huge variety of dress styles. My friend Shaw (Kelemvor in Warfare) said that Bridge Street had the hottest girls working there . . . and now I see what he means. The Fossil shop, for example, had a huge number of very pretty skinny blonde girls working there. Pretty much all of the female employees in the entire shopping center, and at the Monaco, and in The Scene . . . gorgeous.
I blew a couple of hours wandering around, checking things out, and finally getting hungry. People were starting to pile into Bridge Street in large numbers, sitting down anywhere they could, many of them bringing folding chairs, collapsible camp chairs, etc. They were staking out their viewing spots for the fireworks show to come that night. Oh yeah . . . July 4th. I’d given some thoughts to going to some lake that Rocket 95.1 had been talking about for the last week or two, that was supposed to have the largest fireworks show in northern Alabama allowed by law. I had no idea where this place was, or how to get there, how long it would take, etc. So hey, maybe I’ll catch the fireworks here, but first I’d like to get something to eat. Ok, it was going to be sort of expensive. I can deal with that, I guess. It’s a special occasion of sorts. Well, the steak and seafood place I tried was going to have an hour and a half to two hour wait. Right, fuck that. Johnny Rocket? Big line, people lined up outside waiting for their parties to be called, with menus in hand to decide what they wanted before they even had a table. Ketchup? Similar wait. Ohhhhkay, so, let’s try The Scene. The whole “movie theater lounge” thing sort of appealed to me anyway.
I got seated in The Scene promptly. They were busy, but not packed. They charge too much for pretty much everything, in my opinion. I had a $6 bottle of Kirin Ichiban, paid $11 for a chicken florentine pesto sauce sandwich and cumin fries that I didn’t even eat half of. I should have just gotten an appetizer or gone with the chicken ceasar salad one instead. Hot hostesses, hot waitresses (of course, I got like the one male waiter working the floor), and a really super-hot asian manager sort. I felt a little dejected about spending as much as I did there, but enh, I’ll get over it.
I head back out, wander some more, and then eventually go park myself a little after 8 to get a decent spot to watch the fireworks. They were supposed to start at 8:45. I waited from like . . . 8:15 or so, and they didn’t start until 9:20. Still, I got a pretty darn close seat, and was able to watch something that was pretty interesting to me (especially since I’m down here in Alabama missing Firefest), I was able to see (from about a 150 yard or better distance, but still) the pyrotechnicians at work (not nearly as interesting as when Mike Rowe did it on Dirty Jobs, these guys used all electronic ignitiion), and see the mortars and cakes and so forth as they launched their payload upward. I got the see the pile of cakes on the crane they had raised up catch fire, and them run to lower it down – ever so slowly – and then knock the potentially volatile bundles of explosion and pretty and doom off the crane.
After the fireworks, I wondered back to the Monaco again, and bought a ticket for The Love Guru. Decent, but not great movie. Definitely one of Mike Meyers’ weaker offerings, but still an enjoyable flick. I think it came out with really bad timing against much stronger films, and got crushed and panned for it. If it’d been released in a much softer period, I think it would have done far bettter.
After the movie, I walk outside, to see it pouring down rain. I talked to a black girl outside (I wish I’d said more, talked to her more, found out something about her, was she here with anyone, waiting on someone, what? If she’d been there by herself, alone . . . yet another possibility, another opportunity to regret.) and she said it’d not only been going for quite a while, it’d been raining much harder too. I waited around for a bit . . . I dunno, maybe 5 minutes, maybe 10, then just decided “Oh what the hell” and walked out right into it, headed to my car (which was a pretty good distance away). I tried to make a point of just striding into it like it didn’t matter, keeping my head up, not running, not hunching or trying to shield any part of myself from the elements. I got soaked by the time I made it to my car, of course; I think it started raining harder when I was about halfway there.
I drove home in the rain, kind of enjoying it, feeling my car just plowing through everything, and came back home to a cat that was very happy to see me (I’m sure she’d been hiding and quite frightened from both the weather and lots of fireworks being set off and making booming and cracking noises).
Altogether, not a bad day . . . though it has, once again, really driven home to me a few things. I need to make regular exercise, even if just walking for a while, something that I DO. I also really, really want to find a girlfriend. The lonely hurts sometimes. I think that perhaps having been with someone for a while, even though it was very unintentional, makes being alone again now harder than it was when I’d been used to being alone for years.
Actually, there is one person I’d really like as a candidate for the whole girlfriend ideal . . . or maybe friend with occasional benefits, or something. Someone intelligent, attractive, interesting; only slightly geographically inconvenient. I just have so much second-guessing, self-doubt, etc. Bah, this is a sucky way to end this entry.
Welcome again, to yggdrasil.net. This is still -very- rough, and is very much in progress. The CMS, e107, is gone. It was horribly overblown and far too complicated for what I really needed. Using WordPress now, I might actually post here again.
I’ve only just barely begun to customize the theme here. I’d like, in time, to get back to something at least vaguely resembling the yggdrasil.net of old.
None of the content, posts, comments, or anything like that of the last two revisions of the site are lost. They’re all saved away on my hard drive, and I’ll soon make external backups of them as well. I made some very basic attempts to import the e107 posts into WordPress, but it wasn’t working very well, so I just decided it wasn’t that important. I don’t think there was much of merit that I had to say on any of those posts anyway.
Two VERY Wrong Things
I’ve learned of two things today that are just WRONG. Even if id has good, logical, smart reasons . . . it’s just WRONG for Q3Test to be out for the Mac, and not for linux or Windows. *sniff* The second wrong thing is something I saw at sCary’s Shugashack. It’s perversely wrong, and for that, it’s kind of cool . . . ttyquake. If any of the linux devotees that read this site (all uhm, 7 or so of you) try this, please let me know what it’s like, and I’d love to see some screenshots other than the two they have on the ttyquake page.
Mailbag/Response Sort of Dealy: Anime
This in from Dissident (in italics) with my response I e-mailed to him following:
Can you PLEASE fill me in on whats so great about anime? Cause personally, I cant stand it. Its just a cheap version of american animation, and it looks soo bad! The characters look de-formed with their massive eyes/mouths and small noses. Not to mention the cheap sound effects that they probably took from some old NES game.
Like anything, there is good anime, and there is bad anime. There are bad american cartoons as well as good cartoons, good movies and bad movies. From your comments, it sounds like you haven’t been exposed to any of the GOOD Anime. There are several different Anime styles and techniques, including “super-deformed” which admittedly makes things look VERY silly. Another one of the problems with Anime is that a lot of what is widely available, and almost all that is broadcast in the U.S., is dubbed (the original Japanese dialogue is removed and English dialogue is recorded in its place). Dubbing often has two nasty effects of 1) Making the characters sound like hick idiots and 2) Altering the dialogue. In MY opinion, Subbed (subtitled) Anime is the better choice between sub and dub, as the meaning is generally closer to the actual Japanese dialogue than dubs are (and the characters don’t tend to sound like ignorant hicks).
To check out some of what makes me love Anime, try to find and watch something like Neon Genesis Evangelion, Oh! My Goddess, Record of Lodoss Wars, El Hazard, Battle Angel Alita, Ghost in the Shell, Princess Mononoke, or possibly even Vampire Hunter D or Devil Hunter Yohko. If you’re judging Anime from things like Dragon Ball Z, Sailor Moon, Pokemon or the ilk . . . those are crap. Another series/title you might want to look for is Space Battleship Yamato – which was broadcast in America as Star Blazers. At least one or two of the above titles ought to be available at a major video rental store, such as a Blockbuster Video or Hollywood Video, though they’re likely to be dubbed (and in all fairness, some people DO prefer dub . . . I’m not one of those). Larger cities and even mid-sized college towns often have Anime film/fan clubs that sometimes have screenings of different Anime, and often Anime video libraries that members can check out items from or rent, so that might be an option.
I sense that I’m straying from your original question somewhat . . . I’ve always loved cartoons, since I was a kid, and even now as an adult. Anime is a higher art form of cartoons to me, with more interesting and detailed stories and plot lines, and in most cases vastly more detailed animation. Your typical Anime has a really amazing level of attention to detail and background stuff, when they’re not invoking the laws of Anime physics for battle sequences. Oh, and the sound effects . . . it’s more like the old NES games blatantly “borrowed” ideas and sound effects from Anime, rather than Anime ripping off NES games. This is particularly true when you consider that a great deal of NES, SNES, and PSX games are from Japanese makers.