I'm about to go do laundry and put together a news post. Then I discovered that I hadn't posted this news when I put it together about three weeks ago. I'm off to watch the laundry and I intend to publish whatever I write while waiting later this evening.
Robert.
Since I last wrote I’ve mostly been doing well. There was a weekend when I caught a nasty
cold. I came down with it on a
Friday. The same Friday the project we
were working on was scheduled to go live.
Between my going home sick at lunch and some unexpected security
questions that afternoon it was a rough rollout. Since then the app is getting positive
reviews from the users and we haven’t had any bug reports. We have seen a question about an enhancement
and one action is just slow enough that we might be asked to look into
optimizing it. This would be a little
tricky since we already know that a major contributor are 3rd party
webservices.
The weather here in Honolulu is as pleasant as ever. We have had two cold fronts come
through. The firsts was a month or two
ago. It pushed the temperature down into
the mid 60s for most of a week. Then
last week the second pushed the temperature down into the low 70s. It is slowly returning to the normal low to
mid 80s.
A couple of weeks ago I commented on Facebook that the Eddie
was on. This is a surf contest that is
only held when the waves in Waimea Bay come in clean and consistently 40ft tall
or more. I heard that the tallest wave
was something like 55ft tall. For those
that have seen Ecolab’s Naperville building, imagine a wave about as tall as
the building with lifeguards on jet skis coming in ahead of it telling everyone
to move away from the beach and the stream.
It is a competition that hasn’t been held since 2009, so a bunch of
people took the day off from work to go up to the North Shore to see it. It is probably just as well. The city had lane closures on the North Shore
on account of the surf coming over the highway.
That reminds me, one thing I hadn’t noticed before moving to
Hawaii is that Honolulu has a consolidated city/county government like
Indianapolis. The entire island of Oahu
is Honolulu but, like Indy, the neighborhoods all have their own names. I live in Makiki. The office is in Ala Moana. Manoa is just over the ridge from where I
live. Downtown and Chinatown are both
west of me. Ala Moana and at least the
part of Makiki I live in are both part of the old Korea moku, think Korea town. Each of the neighborhoods has its own
personality. The neighborhoods don’t
necessarily have their own unique climates, but it varies considerably in a
short distance.
In the year I’ve lived here it seems that Makiki doesn’t get
much in the way of rain. There have been
a handful of times I’ve wanted an umbrella and only once have I wanted a car on
account of the weather. Manoa is only a
mile or two from where I live and I’ve noticed that Manoa gets rain much more
regularly. When Makiki gets rain Ala
Moana generally seems to get at least some of the rain, though it is often
lighter. The other nice thing about the
weather is that unless the wind is from the south it is basically always sunny
even when it rains and the rain seldom lasts long. The sun and rain mix means I’ve seen dozens
of rainbows. Twice, I even saw rainbows
that looked like they came down to the ground near me. Once the end of the rainbow was just up the
street at a corner. The other time it
came down in the local park where people often walk their dogs.
For the New Year’s resolutions, writing daily isn’t happening
and writing weekly has been a struggle.
The key challenge is taking the computer where I will want to write
rather than leave it on the desk where I play video games. Getting out on the weekends has gone
better. Last weekend I joined a writer’s
group that meets monthly to socialize.
No comments:
Post a Comment