Categories
Football

NFL Talks Status

Mike Florio has an interesting assessment about some of the cross currents in the negotiation process. He essentially says the players’ lawyers are using the players for their (the lawyers’) own ends. Or at least, he thinks the owners think that and also feels it’s a plausible concern. Florio hints at the lawyers seeing themselves as “making law”; perhaps he doesn’t mention a bigger paycheck because that motivation is so obvious.

I’ll add an anecdotal conversation I had with a football agent I know. He felt it was a mistake from the beginning to involve lawyers in the process because all lawyers know is law, as opposed to negotiating. Agents, in contrast, are all about negotiating on the behalf of the players and have established relationships with the owners. In other words, the interests of the agents are more in line with the interests of the players than those of the lawyers.

Given this line of argument, as well as the evidence Florio lays out, I hope some of the players are also thinking about these issues. If it’s correct, then they are facing 2 opponents: the owners and their own lawyers.

Categories
Family

The Sleep After

After their marathon lack-of-sleep session in the tent, the Wife and I decided a little revenge was in the offing. I didn’t let them take a nap all day yesterday. They both tried at various points. The best attempt came from the boy first, while running some errands he nearly fell asleep in the car; and then second, while waiting for dinner he snuck upstairs to his room. The lass didn’t try too hard. I was prepared for some epic levels of fatigue induced confrontation; remarkably, none was forthcoming.

But it was worth it come bed time. The didn’t argue and were both in bed shortly after 8. They were asleep by 8:15 and the boy was the first one up at about 7:30. The lass slept until almost 8:30. I can’t remember the last time she slept that late- it might well be never.

Categories
Family

A Night in the Tent

The boy wanted to sleep outside in his tent last night. It took some politicking, but he eventually peaceably agreed to allow his sister to join him. He just wanted help getting his tent setup, which I agreed to do. My only condition was that he helped with the setup, and he did. So everyone went to bed happy last night.

But not everyone woke up happy this morning. Since being outside in a tent together is such a unique experience, neither of them was able to fall asleep until late. The Wife and I expected them to be up a bit, but not until almost 10:30 with their shucking and jiving.

But the worst of it came at about 3AM this morning when they both got up to go to the bathroom. Their entering and exiting the house woke up both the Wife and I. And then we both stayed awake as we listened to them chat. And chat. And chat. And chat.

And giggle.

We both let it ride initially because we figured there was no way they’d be able to stay awake that long. But after 45 minutes, the Wife went first and told them they were keeping us up and to go to sleep. Shortly after the Wife climbed back into bed, it was like she’d never been down there. So I took my turn telling them to go to sleep. At least at this point, it was still dark outside.

But not for much longer. Once the Sun started to rise, they started talking again. And when it became clear there would be no more sleep to be had, the Wife went downstairs to knit and drink some coffee. I also eventually yielded to reality.

So when they go to take that inevitable afternoon nap, I’ll be sure to pick them up and drop them in the pool. Multiple times if necessary.

Categories
Misc

Around the Girdled Earth

Perusing Engadget’s home page, I come across this article with a picture of a guy that looks eerily familiar. The first 2 words of the article offered all the explanation I needed. Durk’ was a teammate back in the day. He was also the reigning crown holder of a certain, er, less-than-flattering team award. I was nominated for the award as well when I joined the varsity squad, but lost in the semi’s. Since he had to choose his successor, my being bigger than him might have had something to do with it.

Unfortunately, this puts me in something of a bind since I’m not the biggest MS fan. Actually, I’m not a fan at all. But still, glad to see he’s doing so well.

I wonder if he kicks as well on the Kinect as he did back then?

Categories
Family

I Have to do Everything

While watching cartoons this morning, I asked the lass to feed the Greys. She got up and then reminded me that she can’t get the bird food out of the refrigerator. So I asked the boy to get the food out of the fridge for her.

His initial response was to ignore me. Considering that I was on one end of the couch and he on the other, the probability he didn’t hear me was somewhere around 0. Rather than repeat myself, I asked him what he was doing.

He then suggested than his sister should just use a stool. Now, his suggestion was a perfectly reasonable point. There was just one problem with it: I’d already asked him to get the food down for her. After I told him that, he finally relented and huffily went to get the food.

Sensing a theme, I then asked him to put the bird food back in the fridge when his sister was done. His responded with more irritation and hostility than the first time.

After the cartoon ended and I asked him to feed the dogs, even with his previous reactions serving as a pretext, he still managed to surprise me.

Categories
Misc

Cool New Alloy Responds to Heat

Engadget has a brief on a new alloy that becomes magnetized when it’s heated up. The magnetic field can be used to generate electricity as the article notes. The article talks about using it in electric cars to charge the batteries, but I wonder if it could be used in laptops for the same purpose? Or even smartphones, though I don’t know if smartphones generate enough heat. The battery cell count could potentially be reduced without sacrificing battery life, or the battery pack could be left alone and the “battery life” could be increased without adding extra cells.

The article doesn’t detail if it’s the change in temperature, or if the alloy just needs to be heated up, or how much it needs to be heated up. Also, no idea how strong a field is generated. The video makes it look somewhat impressive, but then that piece of metal is pretty small.

Still, definitely looks like something worthy of note.

Categories
Family

A Day of Milestones

The boy finally managed to make consecutive jumps with a jump rope and successfully yo’d a yo-yo. Or whatever you call it. In fact, he managed 2 yo’s in a row.

After his success with the jump roping, he had trouble doing it again and whined how he “just did it, but now I caaaaaaaannnnnnnnnn’t!” He’s sung this song so many times now, I’ve lost count. Only seconds before, he couldn’t even manage a single jump. Now he’s upset because he can’t jump on one leg backwards with his arms crossed.

Considering I never figured out jump-roping until middle school, he really needs some perspective here.

No patience.

Categories
Family

And Summer Vacation Officially Begins

The lass arrived home at her usual time. The boy got home after only a half-day of school. So it’s now officially official, the school year is done.

The Winter had a lot to do with how long it seemed in the end. We had a bunch of snow days to make up and the administration decided to tack the extra days on to the end of the year. That decision chagrined many of us parents whom, when it became clear that days would have to be made up, felt the days should have come out of the Winter and Spring vacation. Interestingly, we’ve received advanced word that next year, there will be no Winter vacation and makeup days will be taken out of the Spring vacation. Go figure.

Another contributor is just how busy the kids end up, even with a seemingly minimal number of extra-curricular activities. The boy was the busier of the two, with Scouting, karate and then hockey and baseball. The lass had dance and learn to skate. The thing we (the Wife and I) didn’t appreciate is that there are only 7 days in the week. The weekend, particularly, is only 2 days. All those activities have to happen some time, and they eat the days up quickly. That leaves little time to just sit and relax. Throw in the occasional have-to-do kind of event, and that reduces the nothing-to-do day count even further.

Consequently, we don’t have a lot planned for the kids this Summer. The boy has a Scout camp and then both will be doing a swimming camp. But the swimming camp doesn’t really count because they both love to swim. I don’t imagine there will be any complaining whatsoever when I have to cart them up to swim lessons. So really, they have nothing to do this Summer.

Which probably means I’ll be a nervous wreck by the time Summer vacation is over. At which point, I’ll need my own vacation.

Categories
Family

And Then There Was 1

Tomorrow is the last day of school for the kids. In fact, it’s only a half-day.

Sniffle

Someone pass me a tissue. I think I’m gonna cry…

Categories
Woodworking

Putting Humidity to Good Use

Over the weekend I resawed some 12″ cherry boards so I could bookmatch them and subsequently use them as panels in my armoire project. When I finished the resaw operation and planing the boards to remove saw marks, the finished pieces were roughly 5/16 of an inch thick.

And they cupped something fierce. Probably a half-an-inch from a side to the center of the board. One of them even developed a bit of a twist.

I wasn’t completely surprised, nor was I too concerned. My first attempt to flatten the boards was to set them out in the sun cupped side down. My thought was the Sun shining on the longer side would dry the board out and flatten it. Alas, that didn’t work very well.

When the humidity moved in today, I decided to try the opposite tact. I laid all the boards cupped side up on my workbench in an attempt to expose the shorter side to the humidity so it would expand. Wouldn’t you know it, the gambit worked. In less than a day no less. The boards are flat as a pancake now.

Chances are the technique wouldn’t work as well on thicker boards, but definitely something to keep in mind for future applications.

Categories
Football

Here We Go Again

This won’t come as a great surprise to anyone who’s been half-paying attention- UNC’s football program has been notified of alleged violations now. So we’ll be moving on from Ohio St, and USC before that. Perhaps the NCAA, if they are truly serious about stopping these violations, needs to start axing these programs, basically telling them that “We will not allow you to field a team against other NCAA teams” or something. Clearly, the incentives do not work in the NCAA’s favor at this point in time.

To be honest, I don’t really think the NCAA wants to do anything other than look like they mean business.

Categories
Family

Braces Update

The boy got good news today at his latest orthodontist checkup. He doesn’t have to wear the elastics anymore. I had noticed several weeks ago that his teeth and jaw seemed to have moved a tremendous amount. Before the elastics, his front-top and front-bottom teeth aligned right on top of each other. As opposed to a normal bite, where the tops come down in front of the bottoms. The elastics had reoriented his jaw such that he now has a normal bite. I was really amazed at the amount of correction in such a short period. Judging by his tone, the orthodontist was quite pleased with the progress.

The braces remain for the time being. Just in case his jaw reverts or something. We’ve got another checkup in 6 weeks, so we’ll see what the deal is then.

But the boy is happy he doesn’t have to deal with the elastics anymore. Personally, I thought it was a shame to set them aside after all the tears and gnashing of teeth figuring out how to attach them. I can still hear him screaming through tears how he’d never be able to figure it out and how he couldn’t do it. Ahh, memories.

I suggested he should keep putting them in just to keep up the skill, you know, just in case. He’s not having any of it though.

Categories
Computers

Left to Ponder “What if?”

Reading a review of Nokia’s new N9 smartphone, I can’t but feel its such a shame that Meego’s future is so bleak. Sounds like they have a real nice product that could have gone somewhere. The video certainly buttresses that case, showing a sharp looking phone with what appears to be an extremely simple touch UI. Alas, with Nokia basically a subsidiary of Microsoft, it’s unlikely we’ll ever know what the product line’s potential could have been. Too bad, but that’s technology for ya.

Categories
Family

The Hairdresser

The lass took a shower tonight, but it was on the later side. So, before going to bed, the Wife took her into our bathroom so she could comb and dry her hair a bit before going to bed. I remained downstairs with the boy, helping him with a picture search.

After finishing it up, we trudged upstairs. The Wife was still fussing with the lass in the bathroom, which seemed a bit odd but I didn’t think too much of it. “The girls are having a bonding moment in the bathroom” was my thought. I decided to water a couple of plants and when I made my way back to our room, the Wife cornered me and asked “Did your daughter tell you what she did?”

Note the use of the word “daughter” here. That’s a signaling word indicating the lass has perpetrated some sort of mischief on the sly. I told the Wife that the lass hadn’t said “boo” to me.

“Yeah, she doesn’t want to tell you and I don’t blame her.” More signaling phrases. Whatever it was, the “act” was moving up the severity scale quickly.

The Wife finally, er, “cut” to the chase. She said “She cut her bangs with her scissors today.” (There might be an expletive or two missing from that.)

Apparently, the Wife realized something was amiss while combing her hair. She noticed that there was a “hole” in her bangs in the middle of the lass’ forehead. The Wife was finally able to squeeze out of her that she’d used her pair of craft scissors because her “bangs were too long.” So the Wife had to shorten up the rest of her bangs in order to “fix” the problem.

For my part, I found the whole thing highly amusing. It was only a matter of time before she pulled this stunt. This is the little girl whom has lathered up the cat once before with skin cream because she wanted to help keep the cat’s fur soft. The lass, for her part, was too mortified to tell me, probably assuming I’d be mad at her or something. But all I told her was “That’s why we leave hair cutting to the experts” with a big smile on my face. All I got in return was a grunt.

I mean really, think about it for a second. A 5-year-old takes a pair of craft scissors to her own hair and miraculously all that’s missing is a small chunk in the bangs. Am I the only one thinking that easily could have been much worse?

After the Wife fixed her oops, the lass immediately looked for a silver lining. “But Mommy, they’ll grow back!”

At which point, she’ll probably try it again.

Categories
Family

The Lass and the Box

A package arrived today for the lass. The Wife had purchased a bunch of easy reader books for the lass’ perusing pleasure. The lass was quite excited about the books, but her little imagination pointed her in a different direction this afternoon.

She’d set her sights on the box the books had arrived in. She knew what that box was right from the outset: an airplane. Complete with wings, a tail, a steering wheel and other controls. She brought it out onto the deck and set it down and began crafting her world. She wanted me to watch what she was doing.

I nonchalantly noted that she could draw all of the planes controls onto the box so she’d be able to fly the plane. She processed that for all of a millisecond before she scooted inside for a pen.

She spent the next hour “building” her plane.

She gave it 3 steering wheels for different sized people. She gave it controls that never run out of “stuff” because there are people who fill the “stuff” back into it- “It has infinity stuff, Dad” she informed me. She gave it dials and knobs and switches for every possible scenario. She gave it guns and bullets. She decorated the tail to “make it cool” and drew grass and sky on it to “make it more real.”

And when she was all done, she gave it to her dolls because they were the right size for it. Besides, something better had come along.

Mom had come home with a new paper shredder for her office. And the box it was packaged in is much bigger.

Categories
Family

Father’s Day Recap

Well, today was all about me. Guess that makes it like every other day. COUGH!

When I got downstairs this morning, the Wife gave me a hug and wished me a happy Father’s Day then directed me towards the cup of coffee she’d made for me. That counts as a good start to any day in my book.

As I stumbled over to the cup, I realized the boy had attached himself to one of my legs. He looked up at me with a big grin and said “Morning Dad, happy Father’s Day.” He likes being goofy like that every now and again. I tousled his hair and thanked him, at which point he detached from my leg and went to the TV to watch cartoons.

I finished my journey to the cup of coffee and then followed him. Shortly thereafter, the lass jumped on my lap. Luckily, I’d set the coffee aside. She gave me a big hug and Happy Father’s day wishes as well.

Then they started fighting about which cartoon they were going to watch. The lass ultimately won that battle and we were treated to several episodes of Godzilla because, as everyone surely knows, big fire-breathing lizards are cool.

The gifts were good- the latest novel from Stephen King Under the Dome from the Wife, Tyrannosaurus Dad from the lass, and a Bey Blade from the boy. Personally, I think he’s hoping I’ll bequeath it to him. Especially if it turns out to be a good one. He even ran upstairs and got his Bey Blade “arena” so I could try it out.

I’d be remiss if I didn’t mention the cards the kids made. The lass made a baseball card for me with the punchline “You’re a hit with me!” and the boy made a card with a picture of some guy sitting at a computer desk. Very subtle. But he also made a picture of him and me swimming in our little pool together, so at least I’m not just on the computer all the time.

The remainder of the day was basically spent relaxing. The weather was great so the kids spent a lot of time in the pool. Some friends came over and we had home cooked baby-back ribs for dinner. Then the kids went back into the pool and didn’t come out until they were quivering masses of blue-jello. By that time, the Sun was basically gone from the yard, so they wrapped themselves in towels and shivered themselves warm again.

They didn’t put up a fight going to bed, making it a good ending to a good day.

Categories
Armoire Woodworking

Back in the Woodshop

I finally went back to work on the armoire today. I’d cut the posts out a couple of months ago and at the time, I had the intention of starting it up. But I couldn’t summon the discipline to work through it because, while the top half will be much simpler to construct than the bottom half, there are details that need to be worked through, those details are important and with the busy schedule I just couldn’t focus on them long enough to sort them out in my mind.

Details like, the width of the stretchers, how to mate the top-half with the bottom half, the profile for the cornice for the top, whether to make the doors all cherry construction, or cherry and maple construction. None of that includes the proportions so that that the top looks right sitting on the bottom. I’ve been mulling all of that stuff in my mind for several weeks now. Finally, with the break in the kid’s schedule today, I opted to start making it into a reality.

Even so, meaningful progress was minimal.

Categories
Family

The Weekend of ‘No’

No Scouting activities to go to. No recitals to attend. No coach pitch games to coach. No end-of-the-year school activities to see and record. No practices scheduled. No after-school activities to get the kids to.

And as I look out the window, it’s starting to look like ‘no rain’ as well.

We’ll probably be bored out of our skulls before noon.

Categories
Family

Lead by Example

It’s hard to overstate how effective taking an interest, or conversely a lack thereof, in your kid’s activities can affect their attitude towards that activity. And not just a passing interest where I ask a few questions, or go to watch them participate. I’ve found that it needs to be an honest interest where I demonstrate that I actually care.

I was clued into the phenomena by another parent. (And let me state unequivocally that other parents are the greatest resource any parent can have.) Back during the hockey season, I had a discussion with a Dad who’s son had tons of enthusiasm for hockey. It was obvious after only a few minutes of talking that his son’s enthusiasm was a direct reflection of the father’s enthusiasm. The father was quite blunt about it, stating “You have to be like that, you know? Because if you aren’t why should they?”

At the time, I was a little more reserved because my attitude was the boy should be allowed to choose what he liked or didn’t like. Why should I try to impose my likes or dislikes on him? I’ve always felt that it’s his life and it’s my place to guide, expose and encourage. But not to choose, other than in the obvious way that there are only so many things I can expose him to.

I now realize there’s a not-so-obvious consequence to that approach- not truly caring blunts their own interest. Sure, they’ll participate in the activity. But they won’t truly find any joy in it. It simply turns into another chore, something they do because they are compelled to do so.

On the other had, caring about hockey or karate or dancing or music lessons helps develop a bond with the child that transcends the parent-child relationship. Participating with the child and growing with them in the activity creates something that a parent will always have in common with them. If done right, it’s something that will always be fun and that both will remember.

I had that with my Father with football and track and field. I also had it with my Mom who has always gone to lengths to take an interest in anything me and my siblings were doing- be it reading (she’d read the books ahead of time), school projects or knitting (she taught me to knit back before knitting was cool).

I’ve also realized that it’s never too early. The boy loves Legos now because we started putting them in front of him years ago and the Wife or I would sit and help him build the project. The lass loves listening to audio books because the Wife and I sit and read to her all the time.

An old piece of advice my Father told me when the boy was born comes to mind: “Kid’s do as you do, not as you say.” At the time, he was referring to instilling good habits into kids. But now, I think the advice applies more broadly. Kids are looking for guidance all the time- how to act, what to say, what to do. Parent’s are there to, among other things, fill that void.

There are worse lessons to learn than showing that it’s good and OK to care about something.

Categories
Family

Milestones

The boy demonstrated to me tonight how he can make farting noises with his hands and armpits. He was hoping I’d do the same so we could have a “farting party” together. A tempting offer…but one I ultimately declined.

Important developmental milestones like this are what parent blogging is about.