CS Student Advice

I can’t pass up the opportunity to link to this advice.
There’s a part of me that wishes someone had told me these things when I was still in school, but I think I’ve done well without them. Many are just common sense anyway. My resume may not be sprinkled with a myriad of internships, but I’ve accumulated widely varied experience. And longevity has to be worth something, doesn’t it?

Rain, Poker and Work

I traded working opening Sunday for Friday off and spent the day working in Hoopeston. Finally got my linux workstation moved over to new hardware and RedHat Enterprise Linux. It’s also got many other “duties as assigned”, so it needs Enterprise.

Friday night, as it rained, we played 2 “Luxor rules” games of poker: 300 chips and 10 minute blind increases. After a couple of quick all ins, we were down to 3. I proceded to win that game. Then we played a full game, which I also won. And I won the final “Luxor rules” game. And it kept raining almost the entire time. I’m going to have to start calling that Hawaiian shirt my lucky poker shirt.

Saturday, I took Dad’s Dell over to the school to install XPSP2 since I didn’t think downloading 200MB+ over dialup sounded like much fun. This was the first time I’d actually seen the install in person, so I spent some time playing with it. One thing I noticed is that the installer uses file transfer methods that don’t appear to take advantage of web caching systems, squid in particular. That can’t be good. Spent some time working after that and some time removing spyware and viruses from computers at a nonprofit. Saturday night’s poker games weren’t quite as good to me, but I can’t complain. Oh, and it was raining again. So much so that I was worried about being able to get back to my parents house. I didn’t have any problems, but the next morning the water wasn’t much below where it was in June.

And now I’m watching all the Formula 1 that I DVRed over the weekend.

Been kind of quiet around here

Working my tail off, getting ready for opening, as usual. Lab rebuilds are progressing nicely, close to go time, but I should probably roll in the latest (out of cycle) security bulletin from Microsoft first. Hopefully it doesn’t require any strange things to install properly. Now I just need to hope for no critical patches on patch Tuesday.

In what will probably be the last chance until September, I took Friday off, and spent most of the day working at Hoopeston, getting my linux desktop closer to moving over to new hardware and other misc tasks. And we had one of those 10 minute tasks turn into an all afternoon clusterf$%k. But, in the long run, it was really just moving up the schedule for a reinstall, not creating work. Yeah, that’s the ticket.

Saturday I took advantage of the wonderful concrete floor and air tools to rotate the tires on the Dakota and spent some time working in Hoopeston again. I picked up Alisha’s new hamster, Stinky, from my in-laws and brought it home. He seems to be happier in his plastic habitat than in the cardboard box. Maybe I’ll get some pictures this week.

A funny random link to a former co-worker’s blog.

Arrgh

On Friday night, after driving to my parents house and then on to Hoopeston (to eat), the Honda decides it doesn’t like it’s original battery anymore. My parents jumped me from their Honda, drive over to the grandparents house and see my aunt for several hours. Playing poker at 10:30 pm, so my parents were nice enough to let me drive their car, and they took mine. It even started using the headlight trick. Saturday morning, Dad hooks it up to the roll around battery charger, and nothing. Oh well, it’s got 7+ years and 67,500 miles on it, more than you could expect from most things anymore. I’ll drive it back to Champaign and run to AutoZone in the truck and pick up a new battery, no big deal. Broke even at poker, got to sleep at 2 am.

Dad has been slowly fixing up his loader tractor, an Oliver 1755, replacing parts here and there to get it to run better and start more reliably. He noticed that there was no fuel filter, even though the shop manual said there should be one inline after the sediment bowl. Looking at the fuel line routing, it seemed like we could get one in there with some creative thinking. We ran over to John Deere in Hoopeston and picked up one for a 3020 Deere, came in a CarQuest box, so I’m sure it’s probably just a standard part. Once we got back, we cut out a couple chunks of the steel fuel line and slipped in the filter, not too tough, but it took quite a bit longer than we thought it was going to. It started easier and ran better than it has in almost as long as I can remember.

Next, we went over to Fred’s house and picked some sweetcorn for me to bring back, and he gave us a whole bunch of jalapeno peppers. Guess I’ll be bringing most of those in to work to give away. Then we went home and had lunch. During lunch, mom happened to get up to get a soda from the fridge in the garage and looked out at the shed door. Sitting there next to the door was a groundhog. Of course, he chose to run IN to the shed. We spent 15 minutes finding him, and the dog finally tipped us off that it was under a pallet with dual wheels stacked on top of it. And, without moving a bunch of stuff, there was no way to get the forklift to the pallet. We managed to tip the first wheel off without too much trouble, but on picking up the bottom wheel, dad dislocated his pinky finger. After that, we spent some time beating on and trying to chase the groundhog. He didn’t want to leave the pallet, probably didn’t help that the dog was barking and biting at him. After a bit of stabbing and prodding, we decided to lift up the wheel and pull out the pallet. That worked, but he ran the wrong way, back into the shed. The dog cornered it again, and we ending up having to stab the groundhog and kill it to get rid of it. Haven’t heard how dad’s finger turned out yet, they were headed to the emergency room as I headed back to Champaign.

Changing the battery went smooth, $49 later it’s got a new economy battery with a 1 year free replacement warranty and a 6 year prorated warranty.

And now I’m at work because one of our SDLT librarys decided it didn’t like life anymore late last night. Hopefully the firmware and driver updates for the SCSI interface card will fix that.

Vacation report

I’ve been putting off writing up the rest of the vacation because I got a cold towards the end that turned into a sinus infection and, after flying with it, turned into an ear infection. I’ve now had 3 days of antibiotics, a good amount of decongestants and lots of sleep, so I’m getting better. Photos still aren’t up in gallery form, maybe tommorrow morning.
So, from the notes we wrote up while waiting for the flight out of Honolulu:
Our visit to Hawaii Volcanoes National Park started before the gate was staffed, so we didn’t have to pay to get in.
We hiked at least 7.5 miles that first day, 6.6 mi on the trails in the rainforest and around the calderas, and at least 1 mi out to the lava flowing into the ocean from the end of Chain of Craters Road. No wonder we were sore the next few days.
After driving back to Hilo, we walked around the Japanese Gardens that was close to the hotel.
The next day, we went to various waterfalls around Hilo including Rainbow Falls and Akaka Falls and a couple of beach parks along the east coast of the island. We then went to the Mauna Loa macadamia nut farm and processing plant. Not much to see, other than rows and rows of macadamia trees. We then went back to the hotel and swam in the pool.
The next day, we drove to the southeast corner of the island, making our way to the east edge of the lava flows that we saw the first day. We visited the Volcano Winery, taking a tasting and buying 3 bottles of wine. We returned to the Hilo area, walked down the rocky beach on the bay and walked around the downtown area. (We stumbled upon some rather large cockroaches on the sidewalks that night, Alisha was not pleased.)
The next morning, we wandered around some parts of downtown Hilo we hadn’t seen, including the farmers market. Then we went to the Borders bookstore and used the wireless waiting for our flight back to Honolulu.
After the flight, we picked up our little blue 4 door Cavalier, drove to the hotel and discovered the overcrowded mess of Waikiki Beach. The sidewalks were shoulder to shoulder for blocks. We ate at The Cheesecake Factory, after a 90 minute wait.
The following day was dedicated to visiting the U.S.S. Arizona Memorial at Pearl Harbor (I just couldn’t go to Hawaii without visting it). We got up fairly early, and got to the Memorial about 8:30 am, and the first available program was at 11:30 am. We walked around the U.S.S. Bowfin, a submarine moored next to the Vistors Center and the other things at the vistors center until our program started. The film before the launch ride to the memorial was almost chilling, lots of actual footage and statements from survivors. The ride out was smooth, and the memorial itself was just that, a memorial to all the servicemen killed on that day. Then we drove off to the Dole Plantation, looked quite a few varieties of pineapple, and realized that Oahu is a much smaller island with many more people than the big island. We returned to the hotel and watched the sunset from Waikiki Beach while hanging our feet in the water. Alisha even saved an infatable toy duck from floating out to sea.
The following morning, we had breakfast at Denny’s, drove around Diamond Head and then returned to the airport a couple hours too early. At this point, I wasn’t feeling too well, so that was fine with me. After the 8 hour flight back to Chicago, I felt even worse.
And let me tell you, the warnings about flying with a cold are all true: if you can’t clear your ears, you will have an ear infection. I’ve now spent 2 days recovering from it, and I’m still less than 75%.

Aloha and mahalo!

Aloha!

Well, aloha from Hawaii! We’ve been having lots of fun. We got here Tuesday afternoon (11 pm CDT), picked up a cute little red Cavalier, got to the hotel and crashed.
We both woke up early (just after 4 am HST) and we got to see some of the sunrise. Then we spent half the day hiking around Hawaii Volcanos National Park, getting some great shots of lava and rainforest, including hiking to where lava was flowing into the water from the end of Chain of Craters Road.
We crashed again early, and woke up the next morning almost as early. Got to see another sunrise, then went and saw several different waterfalls, drove lots of miles up the coast, went to a couple beach parks that didn’t really have beaches and ended up swimming in the pool at the hotel.
The next day, we drove down to the other end of Chain of Craters road (where the lava flowed over the road) and tried to find Lava Tree State Park, but mostly Alisha just got carsick on a winding, rollercoaster ‘scenic’ road. We stopped in a 7-eleven in Pahoa, and a local exterminator asked if we were getting to see the local sights. Then he asked where we were from and he told us he had a friend who lived in Loda, IL, at PO Box 1, a local Verizon repair guy. The local here left California, took a steady job and grows coffee in his spare time. What a small world. And now we are waiting around, in a Borders on a t-mobile hotspot, to drop off the rental car and take the flight over to Honolulu. A day and a half there and then we head home on the red eye.

Untouched photos here, stay away if on dialup (Mom and Dad, this means you).

A few tips:

  • If you come to the big island, don’t stay in Hilo for more than a couple days. Stay in Kona a couple nights, drive over and fly out of there.
  • If you stay at the Hilo Hawaiian, DON’T eat at the Queens Court restaurant, it’s overpriced and bad food.
  • The food at Uncle Billy’s Steak & Seafood isn’t bad, and the free Hula show isn’t bad either. It’s the only Hawaiian owned hotel, so that’s kind of neat.
  • Take it easy hiking around Volcanoes National Park, the trails really can get to you.
  • If you don’t handle altitude changes well, this place is not for you. Going from sea level to 4500 feet is less than a 1 hour drive.
  • Cafe Pesto, in downtown Hilo and somewhere on the Kona Coast, is very well priced and darn good food. The best (and cheapest) dinner we had was there.

Aloha!