J.P.

Love-Hate.

I have a love-hate relationship with Facebook. On the one hand, I think it’s a brilliant software platform that has allowed nearly a billion people to keep in contact with one another. Like millions of others, I have reestablished connections with old high school friends, maintained better contact with family members that are flung all over the country and I have maintained online friendships with folks that I have met, or would really like to meet, in person to build and/or continue a friendship outside of Facebook. When you think about it, it’s all pretty cool that we have the technology to do this. Imagine trying to accomplish all of this with dial up! It would have been a nightmare.

On the other hand, as an avid Facebook user (at least this week), I am fully cognizant of the fact that as the user I am not the customer. My life is a product of Facebook’s. My personal details are sorted, analyzed, computed, mitigated and possibly even spindled and then sold off to marketing agencies and the like so that they know how to market their precisely to me. In a way this bothers me, but my ego isn’t so large that I think that they know exactly who I am but rather they know of my type of existence and there are probably thousands out there that are just as quirky as I am. The cranky side of me hopes I through their algorithms into a tailspin.

So while I process these things in my head and go back and forth with this love-hate relationship, it usually boils down to wanting to like Facebook more than not like it. Personally, I think the good outweighs the bad. I keep hearing how Google wants to wipe out Facebook with Google+, but I think that’s a different animal with different intentions (other than the marketing data mining).

This all being said, I can decree right now that I’m liking Facebook. It tends to be my PG-13 playspace in the online world and I welcome the interaction with friends and family alike. I see Facebook as the family friendly venue and that’s the approach I take with it. I don’t have the need for dual identities on Facebook, I have that elsewhere where I need it and I’m perfectly content with the arrangement. The only thing that one needs to keep in mind is that you need to keep it all in perspective and you need to keep your privacy and app settings up to date. Then you’ll find you love it more than you hate it, just like I do.

I think I rambled.

The Weekend of Bliss.


This has been the nearly perfect weekend. I rode nearly 60 miles on the bike and survived to tell the tale. We grilled on the back patio, went for rides in the Jeep with the top off and I indulged in my geek ways along the way.

I feel relaxed and ready to go for the week. It’s a short week for us; Earl and I meet up in Buffalo Thursday night to fly to Chicago on Friday. Next weekend is BearPride weekend, and that’s always a good time.

The Friday Celebration.

Well today is Friday and there is much rejoicing in my head about this. I am working from home today, which makes my day much brighter. It’s not that I don’t enjoy working in the office, it’s just that I am easily distracted (surprise!) and when I have people constantly jumping in and out of my cubicle with questions, comments, retorts, etc., I find myself losing track of where I was, what I was doing and for that matter, who I am and why I’m sitting at the 1990s styled cubicle desk.

Ain’t technology amazing? I have a Skype account dedicated to my work connection and I’m able to forward my work phone to my Skype phone number and all works brilliantly. I can send, receive and regurgitate email just as if I was sitting at my desk back at the office and all the while I can sit in the comfort of my home office, listening to nothing but Donna Summer playing from my computer (which sits on the other desk) and just barrel through my To Do list that is slowly becoming more backed up than a toilet stuffed with too much toilet paper.

The sun is shining brightly. The lawn is mowed. The weekend looks to be a good one and for the first time in a long while, I’m remembering what it’s like to work while not being stressed out beyond my personal comprehension.

To me this is just one of many reasons to feel celebratory. Have a wonderful day and enjoy your weekend.

The Eating of Stress.

I want the cookie. I can easily imagine myself walking up to the counter and asking for an oatmeal raisin cookie and then paying $1.07 and walking away with refined sugar goodness. It’s easy to imagine this, I’ve done it hundreds of times.

And yes I know, refined sugar isn’t good for you. I think it has to be better than the High Fructose Corn Syrup that’s usually present and come to think of it, present in my cookie.

It’s because of stress. I don’t like eating chocolate when I’m stressed. I usually head for pistachios or something else nutty. But the cookie is calling out to me.

I am strong. I shall not eat the cookie. I won’t even order the cookie. I have turned the page in the script and have moved on in this play of life.

I’ll just lick my desk when I get back to work and enjoy some dust. It’s low cal.

RIP Donna Summer.

I just read on Twitter (and then in the news) that disco diva Donna Summer passed on this morning at age 63. Her passing is after a battle with cancer.

I am very sad.

An amazing singer, her life path had some bumps here and there but one thing was certain, she had an amazing gift with her voice and she brought happiness to millions of people through her music.

RIP, LaDonna. We will miss you very much.

The One Without the 3Gs.

So thus far I have spent much of my lunch hour arguing with the Verizon 3G signal that permeates this fine little city I work in. I keep losing my 3G signal and getting ramped back to the old 1ZPTT (I think that’s what it’s called) data signal that is much like the old dialup days of Prodigy, CompuServe and AOL.

This is not the 21st century way of doing things.

Instead of getting worked up about it, though, I have decided to (after this blog entry) just turn off the gadgets and enjoy the sunshine for the rest of my lunch hour. That will put me back at peace on an otherwise good day.

The One In The Rain.


So it has been raining since yesterday afternoon. And I’m not talking about a mere shower here and there; I’m talking about a steady, soaking rain. Last night I almost had to pull over to the side of the road and wait for a passing downpour to do its thing on a couple of occasions during the ride home, but I usually don’t do that sort of thing, I tend to drive into the middle of storms and make sounds of elation.

Folks have talked about how mild last winter was (we barely got enough snow to say so) and now they realise that this is the price we pay for it. This is the snow we were suppose to get, it’s just a little bit late. Mother Nature always wins.

At least we won’t be in a draught conditions anytime soon.

The rain isn’t bothering me all that much. The only nature related thing that has bothered me in the past week or so is that our lilac bush didn’t produce that many flowers this year. I don’t know if the late frost in April put a damper on it or what, but the tree that is usually covered in lilacs only produce a few displays here are there on the tree. The ones that did appear smell and look beautiful, though, so I can’t complain. The lilac is my favorite flower. It makes me think of my Grandma City.

I think the constant rain has put a damper on the mood at work a little bit, but I’m feeling more like my sunny self today. Making forward progress on work projects is more than important to me, it is exciting to me. It’s important to have excitement in my life. It’s just the way I’m wired.

The One With The Pictures.

So Earl and I went on a drive on Saturday. Because we both drive the Thruway on a daily basis, it was our mission to travel the Empire State without driving on “New York’s Main Street”. I’m not a fan of the Thruway. It’s not very scenic.

We ended up driving along Lake Ontario between the port city of Oswego and the bigger city of Rochester. I tried following Old Route 104 for a while…


… (U S 104 hasn’t existed since 1972 or so) but I got distracted and ended up driving Route 14 to Sodus Point, which I didn’t even know existed. From there, we drove along the Lake Ontario shoreline along the appropriately named Lake Road. What a pretty drive! I was so busy driving that I didn’t take any photos.

We hit the always popular Eastview Mall to stretch our legs and grab an iced tea at Starbucks. It was busy with a bunch of young girls making clucking and clattering noises.


I don’t particularly enjoy the clucking and clattering. After the iced tea and walking the mall, we ended up at Dinosaur BBQ in downtown Rochester, where we were repeatedly asked where the hostess stand was while we waited for our turn to be seated.


Once we were seated and we met the lovely server named Jennifer (she completely rocked), Earl and I looked over the menu. Earl needed an assist…


… yay for the flashlight app on his iPhone!

On the way out of the restaurant I took a photo of the Genesee River simply because I could.


And from there we headed home the back way. There was much rejoicing.

The next day, Earl made a “small salad” for lunch…


… and then later in the day we visited with my Mom for Mother’s Day, which was a wonderful experience.


and then on the way home I took a picture of a set of powerlines because I’ve stared at these powerlines along Interstate 81 since I was a very young tyke. And besides, I’m geeky enough to take photos of powerlines on a regular basis, now that we don’t have to pay for film and all.