Tuesday, August 18, 2015

My Distant Cousin

My cousin passed away yesterday.

She was something like my 4th cousin once removed (I know the connection but not exactly what it's called.). We shared a set of many-great grandparents here in Botetourt, going back to the early 1800s. The ancestors in common were John and Mary Painter, and then those who came before them.

Pat was my cousin's name. She was 86 when she went on to the next phase of her journey. I did not meet her until I was an adult, about 20 years ago, so she was already an elder when we met. I do not remember exactly how we were introduced, but she immediately embraced me as a long-distance relative. She called me "cousin" every time we saw one another.

She gave me a sense of family for which I never properly thanked her. I always knew, in my heart, if I needed sanctuary for whatever reason, I could go to Pat. Sometimes you just know those things.

Pat was a professor of math at the local community college, a mother of three, a grandmother, a historian. She is survived by a sister, her children and their spouses, many grandchildren, and a multitude of other relatives. She also had many close and dear friends, many of whom live or lived in Fincastle.

Oh, how she loved Fincastle. She always spoke of it with great fondness, as if the little community was the best place on the planet. And with her in it, it probably was.

My cousin graduated from Fincastle High School and went on to attend Hollins College. She obtained her BA and a master's degree. She taught in the local school system for 16 years, and then served as an instructor at Virginia Western Community College for 15 years. She retired in 1992. She was close to retiring when I first met her, I think.

Pat was an active member in local garden clubs and in Historic Fincastle, Inc., an organization that oversees historic interests in her beloved community. She played golf and the piano (though I never heard her play; she mentioned it once).

She was instrumental in having a stone memorial placed on Rt. 779 to commemorate Painter's Chapel, a church that was started by our forefathers, in the Catawba Valley.

I met Pat's daughter before I met her mother. Her daughter was a local writer whom I greatly admired. During a writer's conference, we began talking about our ancestry and discovered then that we were related. We stayed in touch and have remained friends. Later, I met Pat daughter-in-law, who became one of my dearest companions.

I spent time with Pat when I also served in Historic Fincastle. We worked together on various community projects, including the annual festival (now defunct), and in setting up the museum portion of the Early Cabin. I remember how she kept wanting me to come and take pictures of various components of the little museum.

We also were in a book club together for the better part of a decade. I loved her take on the things we read. She always had a spirited point of view and while she sometimes got off topic - well, we always get off topic in our book club. It's a lively group and Pat's presence will be greatly missed.

Three years ago, Pat took my journal-writing class, telling me then that she had kept a journal for most of her life. She didn't need to take my class, but she was supporting me in my efforts to begin a career as an instructor. I hope someone finds her journals and treasures those words.

Pat was a people person - she was definitely not an introvert. She spoke her mind and believed that women deserved the same opportunities as men. She taught math because she loved it. She once told me the only reason girls had trouble with the subject was because no one expected anything else out of them.

I was saddened to learn of her passing, but she had been ill for a while and I am glad that she is no longer suffering. I am sorry, too, for my friend and her family, who have lost a dear loved one.

Life is hard, and getting older does not bring about ease and comfort, not like it should. It is hard to watch those you love move on.

It is harder still to say goodbye.

My cousin, Pat.

Monday, August 17, 2015

Fincastle Frolic

The Town of Fincastle put on a little get-together Friday night. It is an event to showcase the town.

I saw a few faces I knew.

Balloons decorated the town.

My pal Cathy, a fellow writer.

Taking a picture of the picture-taker.

The county clerk really got into his role as historian.

See? He went all out!

My friend Pam.

Cannon go boom! Not really. It's a decoration outside of the courthouse.

My buddy Lee and her fellow.

Cathy's daughter, Julia, is on the left. I am afraid I don't know the other young musician.

They seemed to be enjoying themselves.

Local artist, Ed Bordett, hanging out near the cookies.

My husband, right, talks to his old friend, John.

The bank was a popular spot; they were giving away cookies and ice water.

Old friend John.

My pal Rene at the library.

My husband has a word with Paige, head librarian at the Fincastle branch.

Sunday, August 16, 2015

Sunday Stealing: I Want You

From: Sunday Stealing

I Want You to be Free from Me Meme


1. Are your nails painted a dark or light color?  My nails are not painted. They are bitten and chewed.

2. Have you ever ordered pizza online?   Yes.
 
3. What color was the last candle you lit? 
White, and non-scented.

4. Is there something written on your shirt right now? Yes. It says "Keepin' It Rural. Live. Laugh. Farm."

5. Is there a bookshelf in your room? There are four of them, actually.
 
6. Do you own a treadmill? 
Yes, and I use it.
 
7. Have you ever signed up for a gym membership? 
No.
 
8. Is there a garbage can in your room? What color is it? 
White.

9. Have you ever read in the bathtub? Yes.

10. Have you ever had to wear a hairnet? No.
 
11. Do you know how many pages were in the last book you read? 
The last print book had 513 pages. The last audio book had 25 discs. The last Kindle book, I don't know because the Kindle doesn't use pages, it uses locations.

12. On what day of the week do you usually do the laundry?  I do laundry almost every day. I live on a farm. My husband sometimes changes clothes three times a day.

13. Do you use the Facebook chat often? 
Define "often." But yes, I use it.

14. Do you have any baby pictures of yourself on your computer? 

My brother in the car seat, me with the doll.

15. Do you eat onion rings? No. Or at least not very often.

16. What flavor of tea did you last have?  Red Rose decaf black tea.

17. Do you own a bathrobe? Yes.

18. Did you/will you have coffee or some other form of caffeine today?  I don't drink caffeine.
 
19. Do you have a mailbox or do you collect your mail from the post office? 
Mailbox.
 
20. What was the last animal you saw, and was it a pet? 
A deer in the front yard. It is not a pet although it seldom runs when it seems me.

21. What was the last documentary you watched focusing on?  I don't recall. Does Downton Abby count as a documentary?

22. Is there anything you need to remember to do before the day ends? I need to change the Brita pitcher filter.

23. Is your car messy, or do you like to keep it clean?  My husband likes it clean, but I keep it rather messy.

24. Are you the type to wake up before the sun rises?  My alarm goes off at 6 a.m. every morning, even on the weekends.

25. Do you get uncomfortable when people stare at you? Wouldn't you?

26. Have you ever been admitted to the hospital for a long period of time? Yes.

__________

I encourage you to visit other participants in Sunday Stealing posts and leave a comment. Cheers to all us thieves who love memes, however we come by them.

Saturday, August 15, 2015

Saturday 9: Stay With Me

Saturday 9: Stay with Me (2014)

 . . . because Kwizgiver recommended it
Unfamiliar with this week's tune? Hear it here.


1) Sam Smith explains that this song is about just not wanting to wake up alone. How about you? Are you comfortable being by yourself?

A. I am an introvert, so I prefer to be alone. I do, however, like to socialize sometimes. I am not a total hermit, though I have been accused of that a time or two.

2) Last year a lawsuit filed by Tom Petty and Jeff Lynne, who maintained that "Stay with Me" was really just "I Won't Back Down." Petty and Lynne won. Have you ever served on a jury?

A. No. I would like to, but the two times I was called I was sent away because I was a newspaper reporter.

3) Smith performed this on The David Letterman Show. Did you watch Dave's final episode last May?
 
A. I did not. I used to watch Dave frequently but that was before I turned 50 and found the bed called me every night at 10 p.m. whether I wanted to be there or not.
 
4) Smith says his style was influenced by ladies with "massive voices," including Adele, Amy Winehouse, Chaka Kahn, and Whitney Houston. Of those four, which do you listen to most often?
 
A. Um. None? I only know of one Adele song, no Amy Winehouse songs, Chaka Kahn goes back to my youth to the Disco era, if I'm not mistaken, and Houston hit her prime in the early 1990s, I think. My favorite female singers are Melissa Etheridge and Sheryl Crow, not that anybody cares. I also like Celine Dion (don't hit me for that), early Dolly Parton (though I can't stand to look at her now, with all of that plastic surgery), Bonnie Raitt, Pat Benatar, Chrissie Hynde, and the Wilson sisters (Heart).

5) Speaking of style, Mr. Smith is a smart dressed man who looks comfortable and dapper as he walks the red carpet in a tux. Do you enjoy getting dressed up for special occasions?
 
A. Not particularly. Having said that, I always try to look clean and neat, and never go out without my hair combed and make-up on.

6) "Occasions" is a word that makes Crazy Sam stumble because she can never remember how to spell it correctly. Are you a good speller?
 
A. That is what the squiggly little red lines are for in word processing programs now. But I did win the classroom spelling bee in the 5th grade. Yay me.
 
7) Sam Smith was born on May 19, which makes him a Taurus. When did you last check your horoscope?

A. I read it every day in the local paper.

8) Tauruses are supposed to be reliable, organized and ambitious. Do any of those three adjectives describe you?

A. I'm reliable if I promise something. I am not organized and apparently at the moment my only ambition is to feel well enough to find an ambition.

9) Random question: Look at the floor. Do you see carpet, rug, hard wood or tile?
 
A. Parquet wood flooring, oak finished. We put it down ourselves about 15 years ago now. It's worn at my desk, where my chair rolls over it even though I have a thick plastic protector there. The protector tends to slide.
 
_____________

I encourage you to visit other participants in Saturday 9 posts and leave a comment. Because there are no rules, it is your choice. Saturday 9 players hate rules. We love memes, however.

Friday, August 14, 2015

Get an Editor

Lately, I have been reading numerous nonfiction "books" that I downloaded for free from Amazon. They are all e-books and I read them on my Kindle.

They normally sell for anywhere from 99 cents to $2.99 or so. They are not true books; most can be read in an hour. They're more like very long novels. I doubt any of them are more than 40 pages (it's hard to tell on the Kindle, which uses location, not page numbers). I would not have paid for them but when they are offered for free, I download them to have something to read at the doctor's office.

With one exception, all of these books have needed editing. They have poorly written sentences, misspellings, and missing words.

The further I read into the work (I have a hard time calling these things "books"), the more errors I found. What seemed like a decent read in the first few pages soon soured.

I understand that these days the reading public devours anything and no one but grammar gussies such as myself care a whit about real sentences and punctuation. However, I would have been offended had I paid money - even 99 cents - for these books only to find so many errors. One or two errors would not be worthy of comment, but numerous ones are.

And the errors are many, and apparently in most of these books.

If you are thinking of self-publishing, by all means, do it, but please at least run the spell check on your software before you hit the "send" button and hustle the thing off to Amazon.

Thursday, August 13, 2015

Thursday Thirteen

Today I'm going to talk about guitars. I've been playing the guitar since I was around 12, but I have gone through long spells of not playing at all. Sometimes years. Then I pick it back up and play a while. However, I do not play as well as I once did because I don't practice.

There are many brands and types of guitars. No one likes the same thing, and everyone has a different opinion as to what is best. I think you get what you pay for in a guitar, generally, and so the more money you can put into an instrument, the better the quality of sound as well as ease of play. You can buy guitars from $100 to $10,000 and up.

In my dotage, I prefer a small-bodied acoustic guitar (which seem to be difficult to find in my area). I have back problems and the larger dreadnaught body acoustic guitars are hard for me to handle. Electric guitars, too, no longer interest me because they are too heavy for me to hold.

You can click the links to find out more about the guitar brands if you want.

1. Gibson. I learned to play on a small Gibson (I don't remember what style), and I think highly of Gibsons, particularly with higher end models. Gibson is famous for its Les Paul brand, an electric guitar that most musicians play at one time or another. If I were going to purchase a new guitar, I think I would like the Gibson L-00, a 12-fret red spruce limited edition small-body guitar (priced at $2,799). However, I've not had my hands on one and I won't make such a purchase without playing the instrument first. Gibson has been around since 1902.

2. Yamaha. I have a small bodied Yamaha FG-150 that my grandfather gave to me in 1981. The guitar needs a new set of tuner keys and new strings and it's pretty beat up. Yamaha has been around since the late 1880s, but it has been in the US since about 1960.

3. Takamine. The guitar I play the most these days is a classical Takamine that I purchased myself about 25 years ago. (I can't believe I've had that guitar that long.) It has excellent sound quality and I get a lot out of it for what it is. It is a mid-line guitar, not the best, but not the worst, either. Takamine has been around since 1959.

4. Alvarez. I took my nephew guitar shopping about 8 years ago and he chose an Alvarez to take to college with him. I don't know if he ever really learned to play it or if he even still has it. Alvarez has been around since 1965.

5. Gretsch. My father had a big orange Gretsch electric guitar. It was huge and much too large for me to play. Gretsch has also been around since the 1880s.

6. Taylor. I had never heard of this guitar until I saw a youtube video of a girl playing one. I loved the sound of it. I wouldn't mind having one of these little beauties. They can be incredibly expensive, running in the $9,000 range, although Taylor has a little GS Mini guitar for about $600 that I would like to see up close and personal one of these days.

7. Martin. To be honest, I don't know of anyone who doesn't love a Martin and think it's one of the better guitar brands out there. I would certainly like to have one (apparently I want them all, don't I?). Martins appear to have been around forever, at least from the timeline on the website. It starts in the 1700s!

8. Epiphone. My parents gave me an electric Epiphone in 1977 and I still have it and always will even though I can't hold it anymore to play it. It looks exactly like a Les Paul and frankly it plays better than some Les Paul's I've played. Epiphone has been making instruments since the 1870s.

9. Ovation. Ovation guitars used to be rounded back and plastic, or at least the one I owned was. I traded it on the Takamine because I couldn't hold on to it to play it. Ovation has been around since 1966. I haven't seen a new Ovation in years but from the look of the website, the guitars have changed quite a lot.

10. Fender. The Fender Stratocaster is a famous model of electric guitar, probably second only to the Gibson Les Paul (in my opinion) in terms of playability. Buddy Holly played a Stratocaster.

11. Ibanez. I have never been a fan of Ibanez, but all guitars deserve a second look every now and then. They've been around since 1958.

12. Guild. This is not a guitar brand I'm overly familiar with, but I noticed some of the local dealers are carrying it. They've been around since 1952. The acoustic guitars look nice in the pictures. Next time I'm in a store I will have to play one and see how they sound.

13. Blueridge. This is another brand that I've seen in the local stores. I've played one a time or two and thought they were okay for a lower-end model. I am seeing more and more of them, though. Apparently they are built by a company called Saga, which has been around for about 35 years.



____________
Thursday Thirteen is played by lots of people; there is a list here if you want to read other Thursday Thirteens and/or play along. I've been playing for a while and this is my 408th time to do a list of 13 on a Thursday.

Wednesday, August 12, 2015

Just Some Flowers





The most interesting thing about these flowers is they are all volunteer. They came up in pots I'd left on the deck all winter. I never got around to planting anything in them. One day I noticed they all had flowers in them anyway.

Tuesday, August 11, 2015

Masked Face Fox Squirrel

This odd little critter, which apparently is a masked face fox squirrel, showed up at the house again this weekend.

I noticed it Sunday morning when it tried to take a bite out of the house at the back door. This is the second time I've seen it (or its sibling).

Apparently these aren't seen often around here. I can find little mention of this type of squirrel in Virginia online, although it is native to the Carolinas. How this one found its way to my back yard is indeed a mystery.

Note as you scroll through the photos that in one you can see that the squirrel's tail is about twice as long as its body.







Look at the length of that tail!


Monday, August 10, 2015

Small Minds

--------------------------------------------------R A N T --------------------------------------------------------

It's a little early to start worrying about a non-existent war on Christmas, isn't it? Already I'm seeing those posts on Facebook that say " It's Merry Christmas not Happy Holidays. If you don't agree, leave the USA."

Happy Holidays means "Happy Holy Days" and if Christmas is a holy day to Christians, then I don't see the problem. I haven't heard of anyone being shot or arrested for saying Merry Christmas so of course you are free to say it. Nobody's told you that you can't buy a Christmas tree, either.

This is much ado about nothing, a lot of bluster and air over something that exists only in the minds of small-thinking people who want to think they are persecuted but have no clue what persecution truly is. When Christians in the US are being shot or beaten by the dozens for being baptized, get back to me. There are more important things to worry about than some store clerk saying "Happy Holidays" instead of "Merry Christmas."

If your skin is that thin, stay home in the dark with the TV and the lights off, and your hands on that Bible that you probably never read.


END RANT

Sunflower

My sunflower, a week before opening.


And now, open!



Sunday, August 09, 2015

Sunday Stealing: Crazy

From Sunday Stealing

Crazy Random Twenty Meme

1. Have you ever demolished a wall or building?

A. I have put a fist through a wall. And yes, it hurt, and I wouldn't advise it.

2. If you and a friend both wanted the same thing would you let the friend get it first?


A. I would let my friend have it.

3. Have you ever argued over who should pay for something?


A. My friends and I sometimes banter back and forth over whose turn it is to pay what, but we don't argue about it.

4. Do you have any family heirlooms?


A. My most treasured heirloom is a pair of scissors that belonged to my great-great-grandmother. According to the story, she was sewing near a window when a storm came up. Lightning struck and knocked the scissors out of her hand. They are the best pair of scissors ever.

5. Are you related or distantly related to anyone famous?


A. No, we're just a bunch of peasants.

6. What's your favorite ocean?

A. Old Man Kelsey's Ocean.

7. Do you correct people's mistakes?


A. Apparently I do, since I put in a missing apostrophe in "people" in that question.

8. Have you ever helped out an injured animal?

A. I took my dog to the vet when she was sick. Does that count?

9. Do you throw bread for the ducks?


A. No. The ducks can make their own bread.

10. Do you think babies are little bundles of joy or smelly noisy things?


A. I am having a rough day and I'm not sure you really want my opinion on this question.

11. Do you give money to buskers?


A. I don't even know what a busker is. OK, I looked it up. A street performer. I live on a farm in a rural area. We don't have buskers. We have groundhogs. You want me to give money to groundhogs?

12. Do you ever forward or reply to chain mails?

A. No, I think they are cruel and vicious, and it makes me angry when someone sends me one.

13. Do you often have a tune in your head you can't name?

A. No.

14. Has anyone ever approached you thinking you were someone else?


A. Not in a long time.

15. Have you ever starred in an amateur or professional video?


A. Just the ones I have made that are youtube, like the rest of the world. You can see me playing Scarborough Fair on my guitar here.

16. Have you ever been in a position of authority?


A. I've chaired a couple of groups and I am mistress of my domain. Does that count?

17. If you were ruler of your own country what would you call it?


A. The Land of Odd

18. And what title would you give yourself?


A. Empress of Odd 

19. If you invented a monster what would you call it?

A. Fred. 

20. And what features would it have?

A. One eye, one horn, one ear, could fly, would eat people, and would be purple. It would gobble up itsy bitsy tiny weeny yellow polka dot bikinis and spit them back out.
__________

I encourage you to visit other participants in Sunday Stealing posts and leave a comment. Cheers to all us thieves who love memes, however we come by them.

Saturday, August 08, 2015

Saturday 9: Rocky Mountain High

Saturday 9: Rocky Mountain High (1975)

. . . because Bev recommended John Denver

Unfamiliar with this week's tune? Hear it here.

1) In this song, Denver sings that he was "born in the summer of his 27th year," because that's when he discovered the place where he felt most at home. What do you remember about your 27th year? (If it hasn't happened yet, what do you want to happen when you're 27?)

A. My 27th year would have found me working full time at a law firm, a job I hated. I also would have been attending Hollins College part-time, and at some point during that year I would have had major surgery.

2) In 2007, the Colorado General Assembly named this one of the state's two official songs. (The other is "Where the Columbines Grow.") Do you know your state song?

A. It used to be Carry Me Back to Ol' Virginny, which now has the title of "state song emeritus." It's fairly racist. A new song for the state has been an ongoing issue since 1997, and apparently this year the legislature designated something called Our Great Virginia, which is basically a rewrite of Oh Shenandoah, as the state song. I have actually never heard it, nor, I suspect, has anybody else. My vote for state song would be Sweet Virginia Breeze, but nobody asked me. I think that one has been given the status of "popular" state song. Virginia is for lovers, and many of her citizens are musically inclined, but apparently that hasn't found its way into the state legislature. I find it all very weird.

3) John Denver was a dedicated environmentalist who wrote an anthem about Earth Day. Are you careful about your energy consumption? Do you recycle?

A. I recycle newspaper and plastic bottles that don't need a lot of rinsing out. I don't see the advantage of wasting water to rinse out things to recycle. That seems to miss the point. I don't think using 2 gallons of water to rinse out a peanut butter jar is useful. I try to combine trips so I don't waste gasoline, and every now and then I go around the house and turn off anything that has a little light glowing (which is everything). I wish companies would put on/off buttons back on things. Real ones, that actually stop the energy drain. 

4) 1975 is also the year that Denver released a collection of holiday songs called Rocky Mountain Christmas. On this August day, what's the first carol that comes to mind?

A. Jingle Bells. Which technically is not a carol, but it's a winter song.

5) Denver dabbled in photography in his spare time and friends say he was quite good. Tell us about your hobbies.

A. I write, take photos, read, play guitar, sing, and play video games.

6) In 1975, when this song was popular, mood rings were all the rage. It was said that the ring reflected the wearer's mood. Black = anxious/stressed, orange = worried, green = normal, blue = happy, pink = as good as it gets. As you respond to this week's Saturday 9, what color would your mood ring be?

A. My mood rings were always black. I assume they would be still.

7) Pet Rocks were 1975's other odd cultural phenomenon. Do you have any real-life, breathing pets?

A. I have about 40 cows, lots of wild deer, baby fawns, turkeys, groundhogs, rabbits, multiple types of birds, and a bear. None of them are pets, but I claim them all the same.

8) 1975 saw the premiere of Wheel of Fortune. Are you good at word puzzles?

A. I am just a bit above average.

9) Random question: Did you sleep well last night?

A. I usually get up twice during the night. I don't think that actually leads to good sleep. It is what it is.
 _____________
I encourage you to visit other participants in Saturday 9 posts and leave a comment. Because there are no rules, it is your choice. Saturday 9 players hate rules. We love memes, however.

Friday, August 07, 2015

England, Scotland, and Ireland

If someone were to hand me a big wad of cash and tell me, here, go wherever you like in the world, I think I would like to visit England, Scotland, and Ireland.

I have roots in Scotland and Ireland. Scotland in particular seems to call to me, and England, with its visions of moors and heather, seems enchanted. I also have a friend there whom I would love to meet in person. We've been emailing for 15 years; it seems a shame to never be able to shake her hand.

Perhaps this is the reason why I found Downton Abby interesting. It showed me a different way of living, as well as being somewhat historically correct, I think. And who can resist those British accents?

It would be grand to be do like the folks on Who Do You Think You Are? and travel about discovering my history (and all the while being able to pay the researchers to do the work for me!).

Of course, I am romanticizing the countries, I'm sure. But what histories they have! I've seen pictures of the landscape and truly it's not so different from home, here in the Blue Ridge. Maybe a bit cooler with more rain. However, it does look much like the mountains I adore.

Thursday, August 06, 2015

Thursday Thirteen: Tolkien

J. R. R. Tolkien quotes:

1. Not all those who wander are lost.  (The Fellowship of the Ring)
   
2. All we have to decide is what to do with the time that is given us.”  (The Fellowship of the Ring)   

3. I don't know half of you half as well as I should like; and I like less than half of you half as well as you deserve.  (The Fellowship of the Ring)   

4. If more of us valued food and cheer and song above hoarded gold, it would be a merrier world.

5. Never laugh at live dragons.


6. Faithless is he that says farewell when the road darkens. (The Fellowship of the Ring)   

7. The world is indeed full of peril, and in it there are many dark places; but still there is much that is fair, and though in all lands love is now mingled with grief, it grows perhaps the greater. (The Two Towers)   

8. Many that live deserve death. And some that die deserve life. Can you give it to them? Then do not be too eager to deal out death in judgement. For even the very wise cannot see all ends. (The Fellowship of the Ring)   

9. There is some good in this world, and it's worth fighting for. (The Two Towers)  

10. It's a dangerous business, Frodo, going out your door. You step onto the road, and if you don't keep your feet, there's no knowing where you might be swept off to. (The Lord of the Rings)   

11. I will not say, do not weep, for not all tears are an evil. (Return of the King)

12. A single dream is more powerful than a thousand realities.

13. Fantasy is escapist, and that is its glory. If a soldier is imprisioned by the enemy, don't we consider it his duty to escape?. . .If we value the freedom of mind and soul, if we're partisans of liberty, then it's our plain duty to escape, and to take as many people with us as we can!
 

Some extras:

Do you wish me a good morning, or mean that it is a good morning whether I want it or not; or that you feel good this morning; or that it is a morning to be good on? (The Hobbit)   

Little by little, one travels far.

I am glad you are here with me. Here at the end of all things, Sam. (The Return of the King)   


Courage is found in unlikely places.

It's the job that's never started as takes longest to finish. (The Lord of the Rings)   


“What do you fear, lady?" [Aragorn] asked.
"A cage," [Éowyn] said. "To stay behind bars, until use and old age accept them, and all chance of doing great deeds is gone beyond recall or desire.”  (The Return of the King)


Here's Tolkien reading from The Hobbit

____________
Thursday Thirteen is played by lots of people; there is a list here if you want to read other Thursday Thirteens and/or play along. I've been playing for a while and this is my 407th time to do a list of 13 on a Thursday.

Tuesday, August 04, 2015

August 2 Moon with Sunflowers


Monday, August 03, 2015

Windows 10 Part 2

Blah.

And Blah again.

Microsoft has utterly destroyed the desktop PC experience with Windows 10. It had mutilated it with Windows 8 and now it has completely screwed it up.

They also kind of lied. Early indications were Solitaire would be back, and free, without signing into an Xbox account.

That was the case for a day.

Over the weekend, I went back to look at Solitaire and there was a little Xbox symbol over it. To try to play, it wants me to create an Xbox account. I can play as  "guest" (with ads) or I can pay $10 a year to play something that used to be for free. Here's a nice story detailing the Solitaire problem, as well as what privacy users see as a major fault in the program.

You know what? I can go to shockwave.com or games.com, where I already have accounts, and play solitaire without having to sign into an Xbox account that I don't want.

I think the big change with Windows 10 is that nothing, I mean nothing, is free now. You'll pay for the OS when you buy a computer, and then it'll probably want a subscription to keep you up-to-date.

They want you to pay $100 a year to use Office 365. Subscribe, subscribe, subscribe. Use the cloud, subscribe.

Screw that. Really? But I know millions of people and businesses will accept this new "licensing" purchase model, and that will be that. The rest of us will either have to go along or . . . maybe buy a MAC.

Because that is now my plan. To switch to a MAC the next time I need a computer, even if they do cost 5x more than a PC.

Don't get me wrong. This is still an improvement  over Windows 8. But it's a backwards move from Windows 7. It's a move that takes the PC environment and tries to turn it into a smartphone.

My desktop isn't a smartphone.

There are people who like it, to be sure. It seems to work well on newer Surface devices, from what I've read. I have a first generation Surface and apparently it isn't going to update to Windows 10, at least, not yet. Maybe at some point. I don't use it much because I don't like Windows 8, and was surprised recently to turn the thing on and find it had updated itself to Windows 8.1.

It is early days yet, and I keep getting downloads. Maybe Windows 10 will improve over time. Maybe this morning I'm simply irked at Dell, which keeps telling me in a pop up message that now that I've installed Windows 10, the only way I can do a back up and restore disc is to pay them money for something else. But sorry, guys, I am not putting out more dough. If I have to restore this thing to the initial Windows 8.1 that came on it when I bought it two weeks ago, then so be it. But you will be getting a word or two from me soon about this, if nothing else so I can find out how to disable your stupid messages.

I wait to see what others says about Windows 10 over the next few months. Maybe in a few weeks, I won't hate it, either. Maybe by then I'll have worked out the kinks and figured out my concerns and rid myself of the irritations.

But for now, I wish I had Windows 7 back on a desktop.

And by the way, I might be in the market for an old MAC notebook, just so I can familiarize myself with the product. I've never used them, not even an iPad, so if you know of anyone selling, let me know.