robotech_master: (unicorn tree)
Well, here I am again. Over a month since my last entry. I guess my determination to keep journaling frequently kind of went by the wayside.

So, what can I write about. Wracking my brains to come up with anything that's happened that's worth talking about. I guess I'll just start writing and see where the post goes.

Still haven't gotten that bike battery yet. Apparently my order happened right about when the bike company ran into some logistics issues and had to change its shipper over to FedEx. And there was a matter of paperwork to ship large batteries, which could be deemed a fire hazard. They got the paperwork in, but it remains to be seen when Fed Ex will approve it. So now I'm checking the order status page every day, and giving them a call once a week or so. Still no news. It's very frustrating, but I'm schooling myself to patience. It'll come when it comes.

Work has been getting really really busy, the last few weeks. It's just about back to as busy as it was during the end/beginning of year peak season, probably in part because when traffic dropped way off at the height of the coronavirus scare they laid off all the temp workers. I really hope they're working on training up a new batch. I hope things normalize, and/or they get a new batch of temps in sometime soon. It's getting kind of exhausting.

My Lemonbrat snow leopard cloth face mask arrived in early May. It's pretty comfy, though it is also a bit warm to wear (especially with a filter pad in it). But it's very handy for going out, and I think it looks pretty awesome. I've been wearing it while out in public, like shopping at Aldi. It's good to know that I'm not contributing to the problem, plus it's an awesome fashion statement.

Continuing to enjoy the Homecoming City of Heroes game. Have written several more guides over the last month. I'm really starting to build up a rather respectable library of them, and I'm amused that now other people on the Homecoming Discord are starting to share the link for that post to newcomers even before I can. Incidentally, if any of you want to join the game, and play on Torchbearer, I'll be happy to team up!

My regular bike got a flat tire. When I ventured out to get it fixed, I noticed a couple of interesting changes in the neighborhood. For one, a nearby wine store/bar has rebranded itself as a coffeehouse (while still also being a wine store/bar, apparently). Haven't had the chance to look into it yet; it's closed Mondays. Maybe I'll stop in tomorrow.

Also noticed that a call-ahead-to-drop-your-pet-off-at-the-door veterinary clinic has opened in one of the shops that I literally live just behind. Seems like this might be just the excuse I need to get around to taking my cats in for a check-up and some shots. Up to this point, getting them to any vet anywhere would have been a major exercise in logistics, so I really haven't had them out to one since I first got them some years back. (Goodness…have I really had them for nearly 12 years now?) Given that they're entirely indoor cats, I haven't felt the need to get them shots, because they never go outside or mix with other cats to be exposed to potential sources of infection. (How about that? Even my cats socially isolate.) I suppose I'm fortunate in that they've by and large been pretty healthy, all things considered. Going to see the vet might be expensive, but I suppose that's what savings accounts are for. I guess I should look up their webpage and see what their rates tend to be, then maybe make some plans to make an appointment.

And speaking of what savings accounts are for… To my annoyance, my Moto X4 smartphone is starting to give up the ghost. I suppose it's to be expected. As I discovered when I looked up my original review of it, I've had it for two and a half years now. Funny how time flies. Anyway, it got to the point where I had to factory reset it a couple of times, and it's still not quite right—a couple of times, it's refused to wake up from sleep, and I had to hold down the power button to cycle it.

I could have filed a device protection claim with Project Fi, since I pay the monthly fee, but they'd charge me $100 or so and just send me the same phone—or if not the same phone, some other model that I wouldn't have any choice over. On the other hand, since my phone does still power on and the screen isn't broken, I could trade it in for $38 in value toward a new one. (Or yes, maybe I could sell it for a little more than that in cash on eBay or wherever, but I'm not sure that I could in good conscience sell a phone that I know is starting to go out. At least this way I get something back out of it.)

Sadly, Project Fi doesn't exactly offer a wide selection of phones. I was going to go with a Pixel 3a XL for $350, and had even started to place the order—then I looked up a review and learned that the 3a only has 64 GB of storage and doesn't have any kind of SD card slot at all. That's not good, given that the Moto X I have now with that amount is starting to run out of space with all the apps I have on it. But the only choices were that, a much-more-expensive Pixel 4, or else the Motorola Moto G Power or Moto G Stylus.

After some deliberation, I decided to go with the $250 Moto G Stylus. It's got 128 GB storage, plus an SD card slot, a bigger screen, and a fairly amazing collection of cameras for the price point. Sadly, it's missing a couple of features I like on the Moto X—it's not waterproof, and it doesn't have NFC so I won't be able to use Google Pay to make credit card payments with it. But neither one of those things is really a dealbreaker, and given how much cheaper it is, it won't take as long to rebuild the chunk I'm taking out of savings for it. And it will be nice having a 6.4" screen again. And maybe in another couple of years something better will be available at a cheaper price point.

When I was glancing back at my Facebook, trying to see if I wrote about anything I was doing or experiencing that I could recount for this blog, I just found a whole lot of news story shares about the other big story that blew up in late May—the asphyxiation death of George Floyd and the protests it prompted. Really, it's been a pretty crazy last few weeks, especially coming on top of the earlier COVID-19 panic. And it seems like all of my conservative Facebook friends have gotten even more polarized and hard to relate to. I don't know if it's time to unfriend them, given that some of them are long-time fellow Robotech fans or other people I still feel some non-political kinship to. But maybe I should start putting a few of them on 30-day sleeps just to save my sanity a little. In times like these, sanity is a valuable commodity.

And I really should try to write more about what I'm doing at any given time. Maybe return to Tweeting about it, since my tweets are at least aggregated and posted to my LJ. So it would at least be one way of chronicling my life when I don't feel like writing lengthy posts here. Because when I try to rack my brains for anything interesting I did over the last few weeks, it's hard to come up with anything. It feels like I've kind of just been existing. Staying at home, working all day, gaming in the evening. Going out to shop at Aldi every now and again.

That's part of why I hope that bike battery hurries up and comes; having that electric bike back with that super-long-range battery will give me an excuse for getting out and about, ranging farther afield from my cramped little home. I'm really looking forward to it.

So, I guess I found a few things to write about after all.
robotech_master: (Default)
So I got a job. I haven't mentioned this in the LJ, as I really haven't felt the urge to write in it much lately. Haven't had the energy. To be honest, I don't feel like I have the energy even now. But I finally realized, if I don't sit down and do it, it won't get done at all, so I figure I might as well tell the world what I'm doing.

My job is with a company that aggregates and processes Less-Than-Truckload shipping accounts for various businesses and trucking vendors. It handles a lot of major accounts, in fact, including (of all things) Focus on the Family (though that's not one I normally work with). I'm data entry, at $8 an hour. I sit at a computer all day typing in the vital statistics from trucking company invoices (invoice number, date, amount, type of cargo, expense account codes). I got it through a local temp agency, and if I do well enough at it they'll hire me on "for real." It's not exactly the most strenuous work in the world, especially for a good typist, and I'm picking up some great ten-key skills. I can even get overtime (at time and a half) if I want it. It's not the highest-paying job in the world, either, but it's bringing in twice what my unemployment did per week, so I can stop falling behind on the bills and even come out a little ahead every month if I'm frugal.

Why the job makes other things in my life hard, and grumbling about a medical study. )

In other news, this week City Utilities is observing "Ride Your Bike to Work Week." How are they doing this? By giving people with bicycles free bus rides. After you get done laughing at the irony, you can reflect that it will encourage the people who would bike part-way if they could. As for me, given that I take my bike to and from work on the bus anyway (as an artifact of my having to change busses twice to get from home to work, going from work to home will drop me off about half a mile away unless I want to spend twenty minutes longer on the bus), at least it will save me a little money.

August 2020

S M T W T F S
      1
2345678
9101112131415
16171819202122
232425 26272829
3031     

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags