Friday, May 31, 2013

Semper Fidelis

I have been picking up Richard for years, as he hitch-hikes along HI 56. I am on his mailing list, and he sent this:

This past Monday, Memorial Day, I walked to the bus shelter in front of the Kapaa Neighborhood Center to hitch up north to Kilauea. It was after 6 PM, the sun setting fast in the west. An old man was seated at the bus shelter, apparently waiting for the bus. I recognized him as a man I rode with on the bus many months earlier. His name was Gordon, and he served in the US Marine Corps in World War Two.

As I approached the shelter, I asked Gordon if he was waiting for the bus north. He said he was. I broke the news to him the last bus had already left. Being a holiday, Memorial Day, the last northbound bus left Kapaa at 5:07 PM.

I said to him the only thing we can do is to hitch. I was going to Kilauea, and Gordon was going as far as Princeville. I started hitching, and he stood by my side. Us two guys, me 52 and he 80-something, waited one and a half hours for a ride. At least a couple of hundred cars must have passed us. Night fell, and the street lights came on. We were getting tired.

Finally, a pick up truck stopped and the younger man driving asked me where I was headed. By this time Gordon had sat down, and was just out of the light from the street light so the driver could see only me.

I told him I was headed to Kilauea, but that my friend over there was going all the way to Princeville, and there was no way I was going to leave him by himself waiting in the night here in Kapaa. I added that he is a veteran, and this is HIS day, Memorial Day.

The young man said he was not planning on going as far as Princeville, but for a veteran on Memorial Day, he would drive him anywhere he needed to go!

We strapped Gordon in the passenger seat, and I got situated in the back. The driver said he needed to make a brief stop to pick up some tools for his job tomorrow, and we would then continue on our way.

When we stopped in Anahola for the tools, we briefly talked story. I said that Gordon served our country during World War Two in the First Division of the US Marines in the Pacific. I added that my father also served in the US Marines in the Pacific during that war, but in the Third Division.

And the driver? Surprise, surprise, his father was a US Marine, and like my father, served in the Third Division, but in Vietnam many years later.

You see, US Marines have this tradition and duty of never leaving people behind the enemy lines, and apparently, lots of other places too.

We have a lot to be thankful for to all of our service men and women, including the US Marines. Service and duty and honor are not just things for war, but for life.

Those of us who hitch hike from time to time on Kauai have a saying that when you wait a long time for a ride, the one that comes eventually is a REALLY good one. This past Monday did not disappoint.

Richard

Monday, May 20, 2013

myTouch 4g, I hate you, and T-Mobile applications. I will send you all to binary heaven.

Somewhere along the way, the T-Mobile people forgot that a they are a phone company, that or Android forgot they are making it easy to make phones. I HATE the LG myTouch 4G. I have nothing installed but the base software, and it still is laggy. The solution (of course) is always to get the latest phone software. I decided to just remove all of the running software that wasn't important to phone functionality.

I created a step-by-step guide, but then I found an easier way. I had to find a windows machine though:
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=803682 has a link to something called Super One Click. It rooted my LG phone in a single click. I then downloaded an application uninstaller. (Of couse, check what you are removing before you do it.)
I then removed things that I didn't want such as:
Tetris (default install, cannot remove... super)
Twitter
Facebook
T-mobile store

The TOS can go to binary hell with my crapware.

Monday, May 13, 2013

At least the NSF likes metric

The Metric Conversion Act of 1975, as amended, and Executive 
Order 12770 of 1991 encourage Federal agencies to use the 
Metric System (SI) in procurement, grants and other business
related activities. Proposers are encouraged to use the Metric 
System of weights and measures in proposals submitted to the 
Foundation. Grantees also are encouraged to use metric units 
in reports, publications and correspondence relating to 
proposals and awards. 
I am still waiting for road signs...

Saturday, May 11, 2013

This happened today:
http://www.freep.com/article/20130510/BUSINESS/305100093/McDonald-s-labor-protest-Detroit-wages
I respect the right of people to organize to improve their condition. Quotes like:
“They [McDonald’s] make $200 billion a year and they’re crying about 
giving minimum-wage workers $15 an hour?,” Rideout said in an interview.
make me wonder why reporters pick the quotes of ignorance.
McDonald's makes about $2 billion a quarter.
I question the value of minimum wage, rent control, or anything that gives an artificial value. I'm pretty sure that if NYC dumped rent control and minimum wage, everyone would make more money. I'll pay an extra $2 bucks for a papaya dog.

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

With our general as our God...


I just recently finished two documentaries on negative utopias, Detroit (Detropia) and North Korea (Kimjongilia).
Negative utopia's both seem to have "Dear Leader" prominently displayed.