Graph Pads

This time, the Mead Five-Star Spiral Quadrille Pad, product number 06187. Checking the Mead site today I don’t find this product, but it’s still listed on Office Depot.

It’s 100 pages of 20 pound paper.  That’s better paper than in most such products.  The front cover is plastic, which gets ratty much more slowly and has few drawbacks (it’s harder to write on; I mostly don’t want to write on it). The paper feels less smooth than most, perhaps a bit rough. It might work very well with pencil, as well as pens.

The heavy paper, though, isn’t heavy enough to use both sides of. My broad gel pens show throw quite clearly, especially the black, but even the red does.

Also, the backing cardboard isn’t stiff enough.  It’s not so floppy it seems to have no board at all, the way some of the cheap ones I still have at home are, but it’s definitely sub-optimal, and not nearly as nice as the Cambridge planning pad ones that emphasize their stiff backing.

The ruling is in light gray.  I prefer blue, but that’s probably mostly for traditional reasons. One side is 4 to the inch, one 5. I only use the front side anyway, and don’t really care much about size (I think I prefer 4 slightly, but I don’t think I’ve ever had 5).

I don’t like lined pads.  I never really have. And blank pads (which I haven’t used, and probably wouldn’t like that much) and graph pads are hard to come by and expensive. I got spoiled by the real lab notebooks in the supply cabinet at Network Systems.

The notebook is oversize, and the pages are micro-perforated. The part that comes out is letter size, and is three-hole punched. For my main use for such notebooks I don’t need either.

Much of the part of life that isn’t the search for the right luggage is the search for the right notebook.

OBTW, Car!

Since I’m driving rather more these days, what with one thing and another, and was starting to be bothered by the amount of time spent in the car, and the noise and general un-restfulness of the environment,  I bought a new car. A Toyota Camry LE, in dark gray metallic.

Contrary to every other vehicle I’ve ever owned, this one even has an automatic transmission. Technology advances, and this six-speed automatic gets as good mileage as the six-speed manual, and is less unpleasant in the stop-and-go parts of the driving.

New car in front of Blaisdell Poly
New car in front of Blaisdell Poly

I’m considering personalized license plates now; something I’ve considered before, but never done. Current leading candidates are “LENSMAN”, “XKCD378“, and “XKCD386“.

Twenty-Five Things About Me

Given the amount of time I’ve been poking at this list, I can hardly call them “random” things. Given my feeling about the pressures involved in “tagging” people, I’m skipping that part, but please feel free to post your own such list if it sounds like fun. Dunno where this started, I’ve been seeing it more on Facebook than on Livejournal, but it gets around.

  1. I always kind of enjoyed school. Highschool was probably helped
    because I was getting seriously involved in photography, and learning
    to program computers and then getting a job doing it for Carleton when
    I was 15, so I was kept fairly busy. It may have helped that I was
    bigger than most people through most of this; though I did not notice
    people around me being picked on physically much at all.
  2. Everything I’ve ever been paid for doing, I learned on my own.
    (Software development, photography, handgun self-defense training;
    that last required certification courses as well). This is not to say
    that people didn’t help me, teach me things, at various times, of
    course, and I also learned huge amounts from various books. Perhaps a
    better phrase is “outside of class”. I’ve even taken some courses on
    programming, after I’d been doing it for more than 5 years.
  3. After an evaluation by a school psychologist, I was started into
    school a year early.
  4. Every girl-friend I’ve had after I got into SF fandom I either found
    in SF fandom, or dragged into SF fandom at least to the point of
    attending a convention. It doesn’t appear to have stuck with any of
    the ones I dragged in, however.
  5. I almost had a second major in film in college. I took lots of production courses, the screen-writing course, and some analysis courses. Since then I’ve worked on the video coverage of the 1976 Worldcon in Kansas City, and Will Shetterly’s attempt at making a 16mm feature film of Emma’s War for the Oaks. I was assistant camera operator, and second-unit director and camera operator for some of the fight sequences.
  6. I have made three Atlantic crossings by ship. The return trip from
    the first one was by propellor-driven airplane. I don’t remember
    where-all we stopped to refuel. (This was in 1959).
  7. I have never had or trained for a pilot’s license or a ham radio
    license.
  8. I thought about ways to construct plastic Lenses (ala Doc Smith) in
    shop class, but was aware that without the Arisians to guarantee the
    integrity of the wearers (and augment their powers), they wouldn’t be
    very practical.
  9. My favorite math class in college would have to be the Foundations of
    Math course I took. We were told that foundations specialists had the
    highest insanity rate of all job categories. I wonder if that
    included chess players?
  10. The first computer I programmed was an IBM 1620. It had 20,000 decimal digits of magnetic core memory, but no disk
    drive.
  11. I applied to two colleges, and got into both. I went to Carleton; the
    other one was Stanford. I was never worried about getting into
    Carleton; I wrote software for their admissions office, so their
    applicant pool was my test data, and I knew where I stood compared to
    the other people they accepted.
  12. I first got a driver’s license when I was 22. This was fairly shortly
    before I bought my first car.
  13. I had no religious upgringing. My father did some traveling to
    lecture on agnosticism in the 1960s. If any of my grandparents had
    religious beliefs, they never mentioned them to me, and I never saw
    them go to church or anything. (However, my closest grandparent was
    1500 miles away.)
  14. My current house has been continuously online via broadband of some
    sort since 1996 (originally, via ISDN). The house before that was in
    a neighborhood that never did get ISDN, so I couldn’t have a
    connection there, so instead I had a co-located server at GoFast.net
    (which was a swap for my being their Usenet news admin).
  15. I am the heir to the Dyer Baronetcy (of Tottenham), created in 1678
    (the current baronet is a distinguished mathematician, Peter
    Swinnerton-Dyer). This will not be record-setting, but I’m a big enough excursion from the direct line of descent to be somewhat notable. I’ve tested a couple of places that offered to tell me what my coat of arms was, and none of them have noticed.
  16. I have about 70,000 image files, nearly all of images I took myself,
    on my home file-server. (There are multiple copies, often three, of
    all the GOOD images, and often two even of the mediocre ones if it’s
    included in my snapshot album.)
  17. I had something of a run-in with my 9th grade shop teacher because he
    couldn’t understand the algebra I used to transform the formula for
    board-feet that he gave us. Which I had learned in 8th grade algebra.
  18. I have attended every Minicon held since I started going to them, in
    1973. I haven’t found pictures from the first couple, though, and may
    not even have any. I’ve probably worked on every one since the third
    at least a little bit (I’ve gone as far as being chairman or on the
    exec for a few, and Pamela and I were guests at one).
  19. I own a 5-foot flexible 5/8″ drill bit.
  20. I discovered spicy Chinese food at the Village Wok in 1975, and
    shortly took to cooking it myself. Jumbo Gai Ding! And my favorite,
    ginger onion beef! Mrs. Chiang’s Szechuan Cookbook is my
    favorite book on the topic.
  21. I got seduced into eating raw fish by the tuna sashimi appetizer at
    Legal Seafoods (mmmm, tuna and soy and wasabi!). I eventually
    progressed to eating a wider variety of raw fish, with rice, at Shiro
    in Berlin MA, while we were living out there. They appear to still be in
    business.
  22. I have not had any living grandparents since 1983. The last one was
    my English grandfather.
  23. I was once asked by the teacher who ran the highschool computer lab
    if I’d given any help to one student on the homework assignment (I
    wasn’t in the course myself). Turns out our prime numbers program was
    half as many lines of code as anybody elses. (There was no reason I
    shouldn’t give moderate help on homework assignments; I did quite a
    lot of informal tutoring in math and computer programming in
    higshchool.)
  24. I’ve been actively involved in science fiction fandom since attending
    my first convention in 1972 (the Worldcon in LA). I’ve been in apas,
    been a club officer, and worked on conventions. I’ve contributed
    photos to some fanzines, but haven’t published articles or published
    my own fanzine. I also gave Minn-StF its domain name and first web
    presence.
  25. I’ve flown in a Comet, a VC-10, a Caravelle, a 707, a DC-8, Lockheed Constellation, and I believe an Electra, and of course many DC-3s, and many more modern airplanes. I haven’t yet ridden in a Boeing 777 or any of the bigger Airbus planes.

Seti@Home

I seem to have come up as the “user of the day” at Seti@Home.

Which I guess means this is a good time to point out to people that the load on Team Minn-StF is being carried by very few people, the majority of whom have never lived in Minneapolis.  I’m sure some more of you could manage to run BOINC and the Seti@Home client!

ETA: Screenshot, for people viewing this some other day.