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September 21,2018
I love ordering new stamps.
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September 21,2018
My children call the song Mrs. Hippopotamuses’ by Relient K the “Cat in the Hat song.” I can’t help but think this is high praise for Matt Thiessen and company. 🎵
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September 21,2018
My favorite season is fall and my favorite type of weather is rain. Forecast says I’m in for a very good weekend!
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Haiku
September 20,2018One Month
One month of haiku,
A delightful way to share.
Shall I continue?
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Reading
September 20,2018
Finished reading: When Saint Francis Saved the Church: How a Converted Medieval Troubadour Created a Spiritual Vision for the Ages by Jon Sweeney 📚
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September 20,2018
Oh, Google. You still don’t get it.
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September 20,2018
Completing online surveys for restaurants, businesses, and even doctor’s offices can be an inconvenience. But, they’re also a great act of mercy and just might earn someone a much needed promotion and raise.
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Haiku
September 19,2018The Worst Kind of Day
Head is volcano,
Migraine ruined my whole day.
Sorry I can’t play, kids!
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September 19,2018
My family gathers for a week at Thanksgiving each year at a rented beach house in New Jersey. We can only go every other year, and this is an off year. 😔
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Haiku
September 18,2018Best Year Ever
Ready to make change,
Why wait for January?
I’ll start right here, now.
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September 18,2018
My dream home has no doorbell.
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September 18,2018
The way most people pay for these…they pay so much per month, so if you look at even the phone that’s priced over $1,000, most people pay $30 a month for it, so that’s about $1 a day.
I hate the way that he minimizes the issue.
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Haiku
September 17,2018Self Control
Public release day,
Updates galore: apps, OS.
I updated none.
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September 17,2018
Four hours after the public release and my resolve to stay on iOS 11 is flagging.
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September 16,2018
I’m going to hold off on the iOS 12/macOS Mojave updates. Not any particular reason, just self-control.
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ChetCast
Episode 32: Dinner Plans
September 16,2018The weekend is winding down and this children aren’t too interested in podcasting. So I welcome a special guest!
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Haiku
September 16,2018America Runs On
I went to Dunkin’.
Just a dozen; confusion.
“Are you sure that’s all?”
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A Bit Too Comfortable
September 16,2018One of the themes that I’ve been reflecting on in recent weeks is that of comfort. Jesus said many times that we would be persecuted, and that our hope should be in the life that is to come. We all have a desire to be comfortable, but as Catholics, that isn’t meant to be.
In the Gospel, Jesus tells Peter quite clearly that He doesn’t need to be defended. Truth requires no defense. It’s not my job or responsible to convince people of the truth of Truth, but rather to live my life in accord with it. By my example, others might choose to believe.
First Reading: Isaiah 50:5-9
Second Reading: James 2:14-18
Gospel: Mark 8:27-35
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Haiku
September 15,2018Caffeine Headache
Quit coffee Friday.
Caffeine headache really hurts.
Should be over soon.
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September 15,2018
Micro.blog is great in that your blog can be anything that you want it to be. I’m on version 2.0 of my blog, deleting everything and restarting after eight months of use. In version 1.0, I made it my Twitter. In version 2.0, I made it my own.
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Haiku
September 14,2018Flu Shots
Surprise shots for kids,
Hoped they wouldn’t be anxious.
Betrayed by their dad.
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Reading
Book Review: Marriage: Love and Life in the Divine Plan 📚
September 14,2018I first read this book/pastoral letter when it came out back in 2009. I was taking a college class on marriage and family life, and we used it as a tool for gaining a better understanding of the vocation of marriage. Since then, I’ve read it every so often, usually around my anniversary.
There can be much lost in the “things” of Catholicism, most easily the responsibility of the laity. Falling into the trap of clericalism, it’s easy for the everyday Catholic to forget that the role of the priest and the role of the people is equal in the call to holiness and advancing Jesus’ saving mission. Marriage is a vocation, a calling not unlike the call to the service of the priesthood. It’s not an easy life, but it’s an important one and is filled with grace and blessing.
I enjoyed the read, as I always do, and feel refreshed to take on our next year. What Alison and I are doing in fidelity to our vows and vocation is supremely important, a fact that’s easy to lose sight of in the routine of daily life. This letter helped to remind me of that key insight.
Rating: ★ ★ ★ ★
ISBN: 9781601370921
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September 14,2018
Getting kids up, putting phone away.
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iPhone Excess
September 14,2018I watched the Apple Media Event earlier this week with a critical eye. To be sure, we’re at a point where there are few surprises. It’s troubling to think that after years of leaks in the supply chain, Apple still hasn’t figured out to prevent its own team from doing the leaks through bonehead moves. The sitemap XML, seriously?
Tim Cook, after seven years in the big chair, still hasn’t figured out how to appear excited about anything that Apple has accomplished. His cadence is slow and he smiles, but I don’t get a sense of wonder or excitement. Maybe it’s just my read. At least I know that Phil loves photography because he trips over himself trying to get all of the info out. I don’t even need to bring up Craig, who is just a delight to watch and listen to. Overall, the event was boring, which is the new normal.
There’s a deeper problem, though. Every year, the keynote follows the same contours and, in almost every segment, uses the same words, verbatim. The only nuance is the facts and figures that conform to the new device. It’s so much faster, the best iPhone ever, the world’s most popular camera, incredible advancement, our best line up. Trite.
They spent about 25% of the time talking about the truly noteworthy Apple Watch Series 4, and 75% of the time painfully going over details of the XS/XR updates. Reports have been out this week stating that the 6S and 7 are the most popular iPhones. Those same reports conclude that there’s pent-up demand for this year’s models. I’m not so sure.
I see three factors at play.
The Death of Carrier Upgrades
Carrier upgrades presented a nice, stable, and affordable way to handle our smartphones. The carrier picked up the major portion of the tab for the unit in exchange for a two year service agreement. For most of us, that was fine since we weren’t going anywhere anyway. We paid a few hundred dollars and we were set. When that business model disappeared, we had two options: pay in full or subscribe to your phone.
Phone Subscriptions
Offering interest free installment plans destroyed iPhone resale value. It used to be that you could sell your unlocked iPhone and get a large share of the cost of your new device. My iPhone 6S+ with 128GB was $949 when I bought it three years ago, and is valued at $150 today. Why would anyone pay a few hundred dollars for a used phone when they can just subscribe to it like everything else. $300 for a three year old phone, or $60/mo for the top of the line new phone? The problem is, if you don’t do the math, upgrading your phone every year or two on an installment plan is financial suicide. Device cost, AppleCare, taxes, and carrier charges, not to mention cases adds up incredibly quickly. You don’t get a sense of that large expense when it’s broken up into little pieces.
Underutilized Features
Let’s say you want to and can afford to upgrade your phone every year. An honest survey of how you use your phone will reveal that you may never use any of the features of the XS as compared to the X or even the oft-forgotten 8. Yes it’s crazy fast, yes FaceID is faster(?), yes it’s super retina, but if we primarily use our phones for web browsing, music, and texting, you’ll never need the high computational power that was the headline feature. Most of the pictures that I take aren’t for magazine covers, they’re for posterity, so a very small percentage of photos will need the enhancements that the XS offers. I never game on my phone, but if I did it would probably be something simple like Monument Valley or a puzzle. I’m also still waiting for AR to do something actually useful, in spite of Silicon’s Valley insistence that it’s the future for everyone. 512GB, half a terabyte, is huge. I struggle to think about a use case for a typical daily user that would need that amount of space within the 3-4 year window that they’ll use the phone. The only thing that seems to get close is if you’re shooting 4K video daily. Oh, but you’ll need a nice iCloud storage plan to make sure that you can back all of that data up.
The same can be said for the state of apps. In the early days, I was buying apps left and right. Most of my friends and coworkers couldn’t understand why, but they would ask my opinion. I’ve bought one app in 2018 and it was $5. If I download any new app, it’s usually because I have a personal connection with the developer (i.e. I follow them online, or a friend recommended it).
The hard truth is that the iPhone has become an excess. Lisa Jackson was right: the best way to be environmentally friendly is to keep your phone for as long as it works. It’s a pure commodity, a luxury, that holds no monetary value beyond its role in being a personal, mobile computer to the first owner. It’s capabilities far outstrip the typical user’s usage. The upgrade proposition has lost most of its allure.
I won’t be upgrading my 6S+, probably for a few more years, but I have nothing to worry about. Apple will always have the best iPhone ever for sale, in the best lineup that they’ve ever offered, that is an incredible achievement by the whole team. And when I do pay for a brand new phone and Apple Watch, I’ll do so with full knowledge that while the monetary value will not hold, it’ll be supported with updates for years, and in just a few months time, it will no longer be the best iPhone that they said it was. But at least I won’t be broke.
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Haiku
September 13,2018A Bad Medical Appointment
Went to appointment,
Weeks delay, schedule missing.
Am not going back.