Friday, July 10, 2026
There it Is
Thursday, July 9, 2026
Who's Suing Me?
Someone attached a sheaf of papers to our front door this morning. The wind keeps catching them and our Ring camera picks up the motion. I've had like a hundred notifications today on my phone.
Turns out it was a notice from the city on a delayed chip seal project in the neighborhood.
My Facebook friends, of course, are feeding my paranoid nature.
I Miss WordPerfect . . .
So, here's a conundrum maybe someone else in the universe has encountered:
We use Microsoft Word at work for word processing. Nothing unusual there.
Our record documents are Word documents converted to PDF via Adobe. Again, nothing unusual there.
But three times in the last two weeks, we've seen the PDF version of the document mess up something in Word -- and since the PDF is the record version, we have to revise the document so it can be used. Fortunately, two of the three instances I've mentioned got caught at the revision phase, so they haven't gone live yet.
What's odd is that in Word, everything appears hunky-dory. It's only in the rendering that things get messed up. I can't go into the details, but what we see is step numbering and cross references getting messed up.
I've looked on the Internet, of course, for others experiencing the same problem. And as with many things on the Internet, I'm able to find people who are experiencing other Word to PDF problems, but nothing exactly like what we're seeing.
So, anyone within the sound of my voice seeing similar problems? And more importantly, what did you do to fix them?
Wednesday, July 8, 2026
Don't Push the Red Button or Pull the Dangly Cord
From Stephen Ambrose's essay "Struggle for Vicksburg: The Battles and Siege that Decided the Civil War."
Cocksure no doubt.
The text:
The Indiana and the Illinois units came over the barricade north of the railroad and captured a gun. Private James S. Adkins of the 33rd Illinois, exhilarated by the bloodless victory, leaped astride the gun tube, waved his elbows up and down at his sides, and crowed like a rooster. Then, curious, he tugged at the lanyard. The gun went off, hurling a shell close over the heads of the units coming up in support, and bucking Adkins head over heels into the dirt. Miraculously, no one was hurt.
Tuesday, July 7, 2026
Gen X/Boomer Tendencies
Presenting a Gen X/Boomer tendency here.
Instagram confuses me. I don't understand the interface. I get notifications on my phone that my friends are posting - even sending me messages - and when I can find the app on my damn phone I open it and I get lost. I can't find the posts or messages my friends are sending me.
Too old, yes. I remember when they invented chocolate. Sweet, sweet chocolate . . .
I should remind my readers: As Gen X, I can adapt to new technology as well as any Millennial, but I reserve the right to be cranky about it like my Boomer ancestors.
Sunday, July 5, 2026
90s Maigret Pleased, 2020s Maigret Curious
The last few days I've enjoyed watching an old Grenada Television show from the 1990s on YouTube -- starring Michael Gambon as Chief Inspector Maigret of the Paris police.
This chief inspector is far from the bumbling of Inspector Clouseau. The stories are based on novels written in the 1950s by French author Georges Simenon. I've read a few (in the original French, because that's how I found them in one of the missionary apartments I stayed in). They're wonderfully told, tight mysteries that really capture the feel of old Paris.
I'm intrigued that the stories have been retold more recently with Rowan Atkinson in the titular role; I'd love to see a few of those.
The Bacheloring
Saturday, July 4, 2026
Pardon Me, Google?
So I'm uploading a photo to this blog as I always do, and suddenly Google is asking me to sign into my Google account.
You know, the Google account I was already signed into so I could post something to my blog.
Why ya gotta be this way?
Way too Late at the Movies: The Night Stalker
As a longtime fan of A Christmas Story, I've known for a long time that the Old Man, Darren McGavin, starred in a movie, and then a television series, called The Night Stalker, wherein as a newspaper reporter in either Las Vegas or Chicago or it seems wherever the story called for, he investigates supernatural crimes.
The first film has his pursuing a vampire through Las Vegas' seedy underbelly.
The film is, eh, not exactly well written, but other than the Old Man, did include a surprise or two.
First, the Old Man:
He's looking good. And does a lot of narration in the film which I guess it a choice, but I'm not sure it works for me.
And the coroner. At least we know he has medical experience:
The script is really funny. At the onset of the film, McGavin's character - Kolchack - says he was pulled off the first vacation he's taken in years to write the story of a series of murders for the newspaper. Then his editor at the paper goes on to berate him and thwart him and bend the knee to the officials who want the story suppressed.
Mild spoiler: Just after he tells the police it's likely they're dealing with a vampire and under no circumstances should they approach him at night, he breaks into the vampire's house at night because of course he does. I guess it's less exciting of a movie if he waits until daylight and skewers the guy with a stake.
There are some other actors in the film I can't place. Claude Aiken is there, pre-Sheriff Lobo, I believe. But there's a smarmy dude I can't place, though I'm pretty sure I've seen him before.












