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π Fixing Macs Door to Door
byFun stories from my time working as an AppleCare Dispatch contractor going door to door in Chicago.
Glad I got out of the PC repair game in high school. Such a fun read.- Tagged with
- apple
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byDoing some reading in Spain in preparation for a work trip at the end of the month...and I've started re-reading Vagabonding, and re-watching A Map for Saturday. It reminded me that I want to walk the Camino de Santiago. Only 500 miles, give or take.
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π I Quit Meat. Then Cigarettes. Then Alcohol. Then Caffeine. Then Eating After 8 p.m. Who Am I?
byMy 30-Year Quitting Addiction
I quit meat. Then cigarettes. Then alcohol. Then caffeine. Then eating after 8 p.m. What am I doing?I don't quite have the willpower of the author,Β but quitting meat and alcohol seem admirable. I'd like to get to that place, eventually.- Tagged with
- health
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Checkin to Komeda's Coffee (γ³γ‘γηη²εΊ)
Vienna Coffee for an afternoon pick me up. -
Checkin to γ γΉγ«γ³
by in JapanBeen meaning to come here for ages. Should have come sooner. Vegi curry, Nan, and mango lassi. π -
Reclaim your music collection β
byWhen the iPod was released it made a single promise: all of your music in your pocket. With great software and this promise, it sold like wildfire. Over time our music collections grew and with it, the max capacities of iPod also grew.
After a good run, the iPhone came out. Unlike the iPod, the iPhone used smaller faster solid state drives. Our music collections no longer fit on the device. We now had to pick and choose in advance which albums we'd take with us.
However, the iPhone had one thing the iPod didn't: cellular internet connectivity. ThisΒ made a new reality possible: access entire label's catalogs for the cost of a CD per month. No music taking up precious storage (which now also houses our photos and data) and constant access to the latest releases. Win-win.
Or is it? How many artists did you forget existed because the albums you owned were hidden behind recommendations for the masses? How often have you been unable to change songs or buffer because of connectivity issues? And when your subscription expires or the service is shut down, what's do you have for all of the money you've spent? Nothing. Nada.
Maybe it's a sense of nostalgia. Maybe it's longing for software and devices that just work. But I'm switching back. I've re-purchased an iPod Classic so I can keep my entire music collection with me again. -
by2024 First Run
With a PR on my 5k. Was supposed to be a chill runβ¦.5.0km
31.4min
27.2m climbed
163.8avg bpm
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Checkin to Starbucks
Hojicha (roasted green tea) latte. Used to be addicted to these things. -
Checkin to εΎ‘ιη₯η€Ύ
First visit to the shrine ππ» -
The Week #183
by- π It's now 2024! We spent new years eve and new years day as we usually do - toshikoshi soba for dinner and osechi for new years breakfast at the in-laws. Traditionally osechi is made in the days leading up to the new year, full of food that will last a few days. Then the first few days of the new year are spent not-cooking, but instead eating all the food. These days though, most people buy most/all of it and there's varieties with western dishes. This year we bought everything and we only made some soup and warmed up some mochi to put in said soup.
After writing the above, there wasΒ large earthquake and (as I write this, potentially large) tsunami hitting Ishikawa. My usage of the :tada: emoji feels like it might be in poor taste given the situation. There's never a good day for a natural disaster, but the very first day of the year...let's hope this is the worst of 2024. - π We went to Disney Sea, the second park in the Tokyo Disney Resort, and spent the night at one of the hotels. We weren't explictly planning to visit the park, but when we bought our car earlier this year, we got 2 free tickets to Disneyland or Disney Sea...and since we went to
last year2 years ago...we thought it should go to the other.
Compared with the time we went towards the end of the pandemic, the lines were massive. 2+ hour waits at some of them. As such we only rode rides with a ~30 minute wait. The Disney Resort app gives you real-time wait time information, which is great...but was also caused some pain as we had run out of data before getting massively throttled. So slow that it took 15 minutes to go through the process of adding an extra 500MB of data.
Leo only had 2 quasi-melt downs and both times it was because he was hungry and waiting in line. I'm going to bring snacks next time.
One lesson we applied from the last trip to this trip was to eat early and beat the crowds. For dinner we breezed in to the Aladdin area restaurant for some curry. Leo insisted he didn't want curry, but as soon he ate 1 bite...he wolfed down the rest and immediately fixed his mood.
We stayed the night at the Hilton Tokyo Bay, and it was really nice. Our room had 3 singles...which I guess is a configuration because lots of friends come in groups of 2 or 3? Leo slept in his own bed and around 5am managed to roll off the bed. The champ that he is, he didn't cry, he got back up in his bed and went back to sleep. - π Bill Granger, the father of avocado toast, passed away at 54, far too young. I love going to his restaurant in Shichirigahama. The food was always great and the atmosphere makes you feel good. For years we'd go there to celebrate my birthday with a nice ocean view.
Ricotta honey-butter pancakes from a visit a few years ago - β°οΈ I merged a major under the hood change in Tanzawa that removes TurboΒ in favor of HTMX. Turbo technically works with any language / framework, but it feels like it's really geared for Ruby/Rails (makes sense given it's made by 37 signals), while HTMX is more agnostic and integrates better into Django.
The other fun part of this work is I am slowly removingΒ my usage of Stimulus (a JavaScript companion library of Turbo). Each time I remove a controller I get one step closer to being able to remove a build system from Tanzawa, which I find highly motivating.
- π It's now 2024! We spent new years eve and new years day as we usually do - toshikoshi soba for dinner and osechi for new years breakfast at the in-laws. Traditionally osechi is made in the days leading up to the new year, full of food that will last a few days. Then the first few days of the new year are spent not-cooking, but instead eating all the food. These days though, most people buy most/all of it and there's varieties with western dishes. This year we bought everything and we only made some soup and warmed up some mochi to put in said soup.