Morning Misfortunes. A (real) Parody of Scott's Morning Life"

3.28.2009 at 6:10:00 PM
I might’ve told you once about the loft I had in my last apartment. If I haven’t, I’m telling you now.

I had bought a loft for the apartment, since space in my room came at a premium. The bed had about two feet of clearance, from the place that I rested my head, to the ceiling.

It wasn’t long until I was used to waking up and smacking my head against the ceiling in the morning. There’s actually a dent and a smudge in the drywall where I hit it once-too-many, in the time that I lived there.

About 6 months later, I moved to another, cheaper residence. Space there wasn’t as tight, but I realized that I still wanted to take advantage of the almost 30% increase in floor space. So I decided that I would, once again, use the loft.

Bad idea.

The ceiling in question was that 80’s-ish drippy, pointy plaster stuff that’s fun to pick at when you have a bunk bed as a kid. It’s a little LESS fun when you’re 90lbs heavier and twice as tall.

You could probably guess that I learned really quickly to avoid sitting up to quickly in bed. Within about a week, I unconsciously figured out how to train that self-damaging habit out of myself.

But then I had a new problem.

Climbing into bed at night presented a problem. I could avoid hitting my head against the ceiling, but then there’s the issue of my “beastly” shoulders. Every night, while I was trying to bring my feet up over the side of the bed, I’d get scathed by the once-fun, unassuming plaster.

The problem didn’t really become evident until I woke up with blood on the pillow by my shoulder. Not much, but still blood.

It was also getting harder for my mom to believe that I still didn’t have a girlfriend when I kept on coming home with more claw-like scratches across my shoulders (not that that was necessarily a bad thing).

I just told her they were battle scars.

Well, I survived through another 4 months or so, until I moved out (shortly before starting my current job with Princess Cruises).

FAST FORWARD! -----------------------------------

Okay, up to the present day. I currently share bunks with the Internet Manager on the Grand Princess.

For the longest time, I was unable to get up reliably with a traditional alarm clock. So I improvised, and since I was on a ship, the easiest thing to do was to set up the Wake-Up Call time on the telephone.

Truth be told, the phone ringer was a little too jarring in the morning…but it worked! By the time I climbed out of bed, onto the floor and got to the phone, I would have a MASSIVE headache (that was in about 10 seconds).

“Good Morning,” the automated phone system would say in a flat tone, “This is your...7…AM…wake up call. Good Morning. This is your...7…AM…wake up call. Good mor…”

Click.

I had finally gotten out of the half-asleep habit of trying to talk to the phone system. After greeting the phone back, it usually took a second for me to realize that there was no heartbeat on the other side of the line.

After about 2 or 3 weeks, I got pretty good at cutting down the time it took me to get to the phone. Promptly at 7am, the phone would ring, and in less than 4 seconds, I’d be up, over the side of the bed, on the floor, and have knocked the phone off the wall….all with 6 extra seconds to spare before headache threshold.

Now, sharing a cabin would usually mean that there were curtains around the beds to shut out the light, since my roomie and I shared the same 74 sq. foot living space. But for the first several weeks, we didn’t have any curtains, for one reason or another. So I talked with Sendo, our cabin steward, and he said that he’d try to scrounge up some curtains for us.

Two days later, I came back into my cabin after a long day. Whaddaya know? We’ve got curtains now! Now I could go to sleep at night, not worrying about when Vlatko would come into the cabin from the crew bar at night. This was a tremendous improvement in my sleep life.

So, first night with the curtains, I sleep completely uninterrupted.

6:59am

7:00am – Phone starts blaring. I nearly launch myself off my pillow and grab the handrail and try to sling myself over the side of the bed. Only now…the curtains are in the way. So I stick one foot over the side of the bed, trying to feel for the desk, which is what I usually step on to get off the top bunk.

With just a little too much haste, I accidentally step on the curtain with my other foot. With the curtain in my face, and nothing to grab on with my other hand, my planted foot slips off the desk and under the bed, which is now behind me as I fall face first off the top bunk.

I land awkwardly on the chair in front of the desk, but I’m still moving, as the chair tips over. Desperately putting my hands out as I try to break my fall, my arm (and thankfully NOT my head) slams against the side of the desk, but not before I manage to smack the phone off the hook.

“Good morning!” I hear, landing on the floor with the wind knocked out of me. “This is your 7AM Wake-Up Fall.”

New Destinations on the Horizon! Literally.

3.24.2009 at 6:36:00 PM
Well, it's nearly the end of my tour of the Caribbean. Well, don't fret. It's not too bad. But I WILL have to "settle" for the Mediterranean and the Baltic seas.

This transition IS going to be a little bit rough.  Everyone will be leaving the Grand Princess (and by extension, leaving me as well!) Well, not everyone, but darned over two-thirds of the onboard crew will be signing off at the end of the next cruise. By April 10th, nearly everyone I've known onboard will be leaving for home, or for another contract...or leaving ships for good.

Come April 10th, we'll be making our crossing of the Atlantic.  As you might know, i do most of my work on days at sea.  Now, for the Caribbean, that means that the bulk of my classes fall on 4 out of the 14 days (before you sneer at my workdays, you come onboard and try to teach Photoshop to seniors and retirees).  Now, thank the Lord, I don't have to do all 4 class days back-to back...but this is nearly the end of the Caribbean.  

April 10th marks the first day of a 14-day crossing cruise with 8 days at sea.  Six of those sea days are consecutive.  

I'm going to die.  

Most of you might know that I started this contract in the Mediterranean.  When I did the TransAtlantic crossing westwards, it was a 22-day cruise with a MAX of 4 consecutive sea days.  People were getting grumpy after day 2.  I can't imagine what six days at sea is going to be like. 

On the other hand, there are some pretty significant pros (minor understatement) to the crew change.  Despite all the great people that are leaving at the end of next cruise, there's a handful of good-apples-turned-bad that are going, as well.  

Unfortunately, ship life tends to drastically change some people (I'm partly guilty, myself) and I've had some really great friendships go sour, with people that couldn't handle the stress.  Granted, I don't have NEAR the lousy circumstances that they do, when it comes to working conditions, so I have a slight advantage.  But when I thought that these people had hit rock-bottom...they pulled out a shovel and kept digging. 

So the good news is that they get to go home, back to a semi-normal, less-dysfunctional life.  I'm happy for them, but at the same time, the circumstances are a little sad. 

On the other hand, this also means a lot of fresh, new crew!  People that have just gotten back from their land-based vacations, and that are happy to be onboard!  This might just make the next two months quite enjoyable for people like myself that are still onboard.  

Well, there is one other little perk.  

NEW DESTINATIONS!!!
France (Ajaccio, Brest, Cannes, La Rochelle, Le Havre), 
Spain (Alicante, Barcelona, Cadiz, Cartagena, Malaga), 
Italy (Alghero, Civitavecchia, Livorno, Naples), 
England (Falmouth, Southampton), 
Ireland (Dublin, Cobh), 
Monaco (Monte Carlo), 
Scotland (Greenock), 
Portugal (Lisbon),
 and Gibraltar.  

Just to name a few.


LOVE YOU GUYS AND GALS!  I'll see you at home in June!

The Grand Princess Performers!

3.20.2009 at 10:38:00 PM

Some weeks back, I took some photos of the Grand Princess Performers during one of their shows.  It's not too often that I get to attend the shows, so I seize the opportunity when it presents itself.  

On one occasion, I had eaten dinner with one of the performers, and I had let her know that I had taken some pictures at the performance, and asked if she was interested in seeing them.  (For all I knew, they get overloaded with other people offering up their pictures to them.)  

As it turns out, they rarely get photos from their shows, as the photographers usually have other duties during the shows.  She enthusiastically accepted my offer.  

A day later, I gave her a CD of photos from the show, and she peppered me with "Thank You"s.  Some days later, I ran into her again, and she told me that she loved the photos, and that she'd finally have something to send to her family at home in Australia.   

Well, as things would happen to play out, the pictures made their way around to the other performers, and word got out that I was the one taking them.  I decided that I would attend a few more shows, to hopefully get some more lucky pictures.  

The most recent of shows that I attended was "Cinematastic!" which was a collection of musical movie themes.  I attended both showings of the performance for that particular night, each time sitting in a different seat.  The last show, I was lucky enough to have nearly front-row seats, just off to the side of center-stage. 

Satisfied that I had enough decent pictures (I had taken nearly 8GB worth of photos, or nearly 1600 shots), I went back to my cabin and began compiling a collection of the best.  

With my best selection whiddled down to 170 photos, I began making the first of 14 CDs that I would be passing on to the performers.  13 CDs and 2.5 hours later, I had the CDs packaged and ready to go.  

I passed the stack of CDs onto Ian, one of the performers, who I had spoken to earlier about distributing the CDs.  

The following day, I ended up talking with a handful of performers that I had never spoken to before.  I was ashamed that I didn't even recognize all of them, despite the fact that they all instantly recognized me!  

So, as they are LONG OVERDUE, here are the pictures that I took at one of the performances of "Cinematastic!"


Why NOT to buy a Mac...

3.15.2009 at 7:01:00 PM
Okay, I probably gave you guys a little bit of a scare, and I admit, I figured it would serve some usefulness in getting you to read my blog. Punish me. *slap on the wrist*

Okay, now, for real. I DO have some annoyances with Mac that really get under my skin.

Networking lockups
Now, this might not pertain to most of you Mac users out there, but when I'm trying to connect to a remote server, I want a "CONNECTED" or a "CONNECTION FAILED" within 10 seconds!

With the Mac, it doesn't do either. If it can't find the server, it says, "I can't find it. Let me try something else. Ehhh, nah, no good. There! I've almost got it...nope. Aww. Wait! No. Yes! Hang on a second...dangit..."

Safari doesn't do full-screen
When you're using a laptop with a small screen, you want to take the most advantage of your space. So, if you're using Windows, you simply hit F11, and you instantly have a full-screen view! The toolbars tuck away neatly to the sides, and you have a completely unhindered portal to the Internet!

With a Mac, you hit the green "maximize" button, and the window stretches down to the dock, but not sideways. The toolbars stay visible and in the way, even the menubar stays up. For you to get anywhere NEAR full-screen, you have to manually stretch the window. But don't do it too close to the dock...you might not ever be able to grab that corner without the freakin' dock bouncing up like a jack russel.

Safari 4 beta CRASHES ALL THE FREAKIN' TIME!
Now, this is understandable, but still irritating. Safari 4 Beta crashes every time I try to

iPhoto keeps on getting fatter and fatter
Someone needs to tell Steve Jobs that he needs to stop feeding cute lil' iPhoto. With all the new features Jobs is cramming down iPhoto's throat, he's becoming a sluggish, bloated tub of goo. Sure, Pudge can do nearly anything, but my MacBook is about to suffer a cardiac arrest. Trim back out the extra fat, and you might once again have the efficient and sprightly photo management software you once had.

The Apple key is gone! (Now nobody knows what I mean when I say “Apple+random key”)
What the heck is this???? No Apple key on the new Macs? That's like taking the wheel off of the iPod! You can't DO that!!! Oh, wait. They DID take the wheel off the iPod.

Bollocks.

Too many useless alternate keys! FN, CTRL, ALT/OPTION, APPLE/CMD
I'm tired of trying to remember: "Is it CMD+SHIFT+TAB or is it CMD+ALT+TAB? Or was it CMD+OPTION+SHIFT+TAB?

Geesh. Windows users have it so great. All they need is CTRL+ALT+DEL.

Me and My Nasty Multitasking Habit

3.13.2009 at 11:13:00 PM

I don’t know what it is about me and computer productivity. It’s almost a fetish (for lack of a better word), being able to have 8 or more applications open at once, doing 16 things or more.

Right now, let me tell you what I’m doing:

-Pre-blogging in Word, so I don’t use valuable Internet time

-Installing Adobe software from 6 different discs (ALL AT THE SAME TIME)

-Listening to Café del Mar on iTunes

-Cloning my class data to four 4GB flash drives, so it’s quicker to roll out new curriculum

-Copying all pertinent data to my own personal 16GB flash drive

-Updating the playlists on my iPod

-Backing up to Time Machine (does that count?)

-Twittering

-Managing the Internet Café (which is NOT my job)

And all that is on ONE computer. I didn’t even bother mentioning the FOUR OTHER LAPTOPS on my desk.

-The first is Trent’s (the Fitness Instructor), whose I’m rebuilding his iTunes library files, since he has them strewn across his computer and two external hard drives.

-The next is Leif’s (the Art Director). I’m recovering music files from his iPod and his computer simultaneously.

-The third computer is one of my class laptops, which is assisting in the recovery of Leif’s computer.

-The last laptop is Maurizio’s (the Italian pianist), who’s always having issues with Vista (issues that I never thought possible).

Oh, and did I mention that I’m also installing a new wireless access point for the Internet Café? ALSO NOT MY JOB.

So, as you see, I have a bit of a problem. I’m pretty disconnected from the rest of the world, since I have to pay by-the-minute, but that doesn’t slow down progress. It simply diverts it. I find other things to multitask with.


HEEEELLLLLLLLP!!!!!!!!!!!!

New Pictures from Curacao! (LINK)

3.12.2009 at 1:30:00 PM
Good news, people! I've finally got new pictures up from Curacao! You can find them here.

Ciao!

"Nanny Cars" that drive our kids for us? Um, no thanks.

3.08.2009 at 8:25:00 AM
I’ve started losing faith in educational TV programs. They’ve lately been filled with over-granted scientists with worthless degrees in talking crap.

Last night, I was watching the Discovery Channel special on Automotive Automation. They were talking about the future of cars that drive themselves.

You might’ve heard about DARPA on the news, the government-sponsored program for developing a completely autonomous car. The primary intent for the program is for the safe delivery of military supplies to “hot-zones” without endangering more lives by sending out a manned vehicle.

Scientists are also ranting and raving about how autonomous cars aren’t that far away, and they could eliminate fatalities due to car accidents, as well as improve traffic flow.

Sure, I think it’s fascinating, and it might save lives, but REALLY, FOLKS? Do you think it’s going to work? Do you think the public is going to buy into it?

Here’s a few problems with this whole mess, from my point of view:

Robotic cars: Robots are driven by computers. We know that computers are only as smart as their maker. We ALSO know that Microsoft has the propensity to release their buggy software prematurely. Do I really want the latest version Windows Vista to cause my car to crash?


What about viruses? It seems like we could be opening ourselves up to a whole new kind of grand theft! Thieves wouldn't even have to leave the comfort of their home to steal my car!


A lot of people aren't only worried about auto-theft, but many are also paranoid that Big Brother might take over control of cars at will. If the government mandates that all cars can drive themselves, then why wouldn't they also take measures to make sure that they can detain anyone that might be trying to getaway in a self-driving car? I don't take my personal concerns to that extreme, but there is something that hits me pretty hard, when talking about autonomous transportation...

I LIKE TO DRIVE!


There’s PLENTY of people out there that ENJOY the driving experience! It’s the same people that go out and buy manual transmissions even when automatics are lower maintenance (and therefore, overall much cheaper). And I really just don't like being driven around by someone else, muchless a computer.

Now THIS is what REALLY peeves me off!

"In the future, we could have Nanny cars that take our kids to school, or any other places they need to go!" Nanny cars? Driving your kids for you? Are you for REAL? It's just another excuse for you to avoid talking to your kids. You've already bought a car with the surround-sound entertainment center, DVD player, and game console in the back. This could be the FINAL STEP in getting rid of ALL PARENTAL RESPONSIBILITY! As if the world hasn't done enough of that already.

I don't know about you, but the freedom I feel while driving is something that I'm not willing to give up. I can assure you that I'm NOT going to be one of those fathers that plops my kid in the Nannymobile and leaves all the parental responsibility to technology. Next thing you know, we won't even need to have SEX to have kids!!!

Oh, wait. They've ALREADY DONE THAT!!!

QOTD: Quote of the Day! Roman and Peter, on Afghanistan

3.05.2009 at 1:19:00 PM
Peter (N. Ireland): I get confused with all these wars. Afghanistan, Iraq, Iran....

Roman (Canada): Afghanistan is not a war. It's a peacekeeping mission.

Peter (N. Ireland): Soo...if people get rowdy...we shoot them?