Blog

Short blog posts, journal entries, and random thoughts. Topics include a mix of personal and the world at large. 

Ocular health

Now that we're largely out of the COVID pandemic, I'm trying to get caught up with my health checkups. A few weeks back I went to Kaiser for a physical. This past Friday I got an eye exam - the first time since 2018. It is well overdue to update my contact lens prescription. No more buying sets from Canada, which is what I've been doing for the past few years.

Why? Because there's a stupid rule here in the States that prevents people from buying contact lens without a valid prescription. Typically, prescriptions are good for one calendar year. Past that point and you'll have to go see your optometrist again to renew. Seems more like racketeering to me, rather than protecting consumers from sticking the wrong thing into their eyeballs.

In addition to renewing my contact lens prescription (my eyes have only worsen slightly in the past four years), I also fitted new glasses. By my recollection it's been over eight years since I got my current pair of frames. Somehow it has lasted me until now. Obviously because I only use them for the few hours at home when I'm not wearing contacts. Never outside.

However, due to the severely outdated prescription, I can no longer see the TV clearly whilst wearing glasses. Sometimes during weekend mornings I prefer to watch TV or play videos games without first putting on contact lenses. With the old glasses I would have to sit closer that I would prefer. This new pair will be an absolute revelation. I'll finally experience (corrected) 20/20 vision again, something not even my contacts correct to.

For the children.

Too damn high!

Just when we thought gas prices can't get any higher, they have! I am so glad I don't have to drive hardly ever. This past Sunday I put in $75 dollars' worth of petrol in my BMW M2. Not since owning the 911 GT3 have I spent that much on a tank of gas. Only problem is: the GT3 had an extended range 23 gallon tank. The M2's tank is 10 gallons shallower.

I'm paying the same for less gas!

Those of you with a hardy commute in a car: how do you do it? Your fuel cost have basically doubled. I bet your paycheck hasn't moved any higher. I feel bad for my coworker who has a drive from San Jose to San Francisco (and back). At least she has a Honda Fit that sips regular 87 octane at a conservative rate.

Totally unlike my BMW M2 that gets 19 miles to the (91 octane) gallon on a good day. Needless to say I've completely eliminated all extraneous car travel since the high gas prices have started. No more driving on the mountains simply for the sake of pleasure. Doing so I was able to extend my refueling intervals up to once every three weeks. I guess $75 isn't too bad once I extrapolate outwards, but man the sticker shock at the pump is there nonetheless!

If I didn't love cars, I probably wouldn't even own the M2 right now. Not only are gas prices high, and so are insurance costs (premium German automobile, after all). I'm definitely spending way more money in return for not a whole lot of utility. Sometimes I do wonder if I should sell, but then I'd take a look at the car parked outside my window, and promptly decide to keep. For a long time.

Just look at it!

The very first MacBook Pro

I am typing this on a 2006 MacBook Pro, the very first pro Apple laptop with an Intel processing chip. The college me could only wish to afford such a beast of a machine. And here I am using it now to blog, some 16 years later. Because the keyboard is phenomenal to type on. This era of Apple keyboard is as good as it gets: excellent travel with superb stability.

The reason I have this old-as-heck MacBook Pro is because one of the campus labs (finally) retired a bunch from service. Of course, any time tech gets recycled, the vultures start to circle. I normally don't go for any of the Apple stuff, because I already have the latest laptop and professional display. But this particular MacBook Pro caught me eye, primarily because it was something I pined for way back when.

It's not unlike car guys buying their childhood hero cars after they've earned some money as an adult. Except I was able to get this MacBook Pro for absolutely free.

The laptop runs arguably the best macOS (or OS X, as it was back in the day) ever: 10.6 Snow Leopard. This was back in a time when major updates for macOS happens every few years, unlike the annual cadence of today. I'm surprised to find a copy of Snow Leopard is available for download at the Internet archive. Though how legit and legal that method is, I cannot say for sure.

What I can say is that it works, because I used that link to make a bootable USB stick to then do a clean macOS install. This vintage of MacBook Pro predates any Internet recovery methods, so the royal you must use an installation media to wipe the system.

I have to say it's pretty neat to touch this old tech again, and to see that it still works, for the most part. Modern websites no longer work because the browser/operating system is too out of date. But I don't need this for that. I'm only using this for the fantastic keyboard to type out stuff like this.

They don’t make them like this anymore.

Smartwatch FOMO

I went on a hike last weekend with a some friends. Before we began the trail, everybody but me raised up their smartwatch to push the button for starting an exercise. Two things: one, I wouldn’t classify San Francisco’s Lands End trail as “exercise”. Secondly, I totally felt left out! I’m reminded of a time when everybody had a smartphone except me. I was waiting for the iPhone to come out on Verizon. Remember a time when the iPhone was exclusive to AT&T? Pepperidge Farm does.

Is this the year I finally get a smartwatch? Maybe, maybe not. It would be a nice item to have, and I’m fairly into the whole fitness tracking thing. Alerts when there’s a sudden spike in heart-rate seem pretty useful. Eventually, I’ll get both my parents an Apple Watch because fall detection is so critical for elders. But for me, I still struggling to justify the few hundred dollars for yet another tech gadget. I’m not a watch wearing person to begin with: my iPhone tells time just fine.

Besides, exercise is exercise, whether it’s being tracked by a smart device or not. An Apple Watch isn’t really going to help push my health to the next level (as Tim Cook like to say in the keynotes). What matters are the actual workouts and being active overall. I don’t need a gadget to keep me on track and focused. If you do, that’s great! I genuinely hope the smartwatches my friends have are concretely pushing them to move more.

Get your steps in!

Consolation.

No pandemic 15!

A few weeks back I went to Kaiser to get an annual physical. The first time in over four years! My last checkup was way back in 2018. Then I got lazy, and then the pandemic happened. Now that things have largely gone back to normal, it was time to check that I myself am normal.

I no longer have any pandemic weight gain! Last September I went to a wedding, and my suit definitely felt a bit tight in certain places (neck, waist, and thighs). Fast forward to this month, and I measure out at within five pounds of my 2018 weight. Walking to and from work five days a week seems to have helped a lot, because I didn’t really change my exercise regiment. As a result, at the wedding I went to last week, the suit that I got tailored eight years ago fit just fine again.

The last book I read is The Comfort Crisis by Michael Easter. In it, the author mentions a great way to exercise is to simply carry heavy things. That walk you go on can be made more difficult and challenging with a backpack and some weights. Apparently, carrying a significant load over long distances is a staple of our armed forces. It make sense: we’ve all seen soldiers overseas with those impossibly enormous packs.

Reading that inspired me to put weights in the backpack I wear to work. It’s a cheap and effective way to add a training dimension to something I have to do every day. If that twenty minutes of walking can count as exercise, then I can avoid having to schedule in additional workout time for the week. Because I plan to do a half-marathon later this summer, so I have to get back into running shape.

It’s been a long time.

That that I like that

Pandemic's over, uh”, sings Psy on his latest hit single “That, That.”

Honestly, he’s probably right. Life have largely returned to the pre-pandemic normal. We can even look at international travel plans again, without any quarantine restrictions. General indoor mask usage have decreased dramatically, though that largely depends on where you go. Costco is about half masked. Whole Foods I would put at 80% masked. H Mart is about 99%. Us Asians don’t mess around when it comes to masks! We’ve had a masking culture long before the world met COVID 19.

Of course, my readings are of the Bay Area. I suspect if I leave this enclave, the amount of people masking falls closer to zero. I’ve certainly seen this when heading up north. My friend just returned south from Monterey, and she was practically the only person with a mask on.

Since summer is the best time to take vacation for those of us who works in education, my supervisor asked me about any potential PTO plans. As much as I desire to go to Asia -South Korean and Japan is and will be open, respectively - it’s probably best to avoid the crowd of people who also have similar thoughts of finally escaping on a holiday. All these Koreaboos who got into Kpop during the pandemic will be dying to go to Seoul.

Glad I already made that pilgrimage back in 2017.

I think I’ll stay put during this summer. Enjoy that San Francisco lifestyle for a bit, free of any COVID restrictions. I have everything I need and want right here.

Why go anywhere else?

The end of the line

My very first iPod was the fourth-generation model. 20 large gigabytes of raw MP3 storage power. It retailed for $300, which is a hefty sum for a young high school kid who had to rely on his parents to make the purchase. Parents who weren’t rich to begin with, because otherwise I wouldn’t have had to wait until the fourth iteration to buy an iPod. I think I was still rocking a CD player before getting it; the cheaper alternatives simply would not suffice.

20 gigabytes was very well large enough to fit my entire MP3 collection back then. Almost all of it downloaded from infamous peer-to-peer sharing sites such as BearShare and Kazaa. Surely the statute of limitations have ran out on that sort of stuff, right? But what a revelation that was: my whole music library right in the palm of my hands. No more burning and swapping CDs. Music listening was never going to be same again.

Until my iPod got unceremoniously strong-armed robbed from me during junior year. Those days, the white-colored headphone cords - iconic to the iPod mystique - made any wearer an obvious target to thieves. Much like smartphone thefts of today, dudes would come up and snatch the iPod right out from your hands before you can even react.

I didn’t get another iPod until my freshman year of college. When I actually had my own money to spend yet another $300 on one. This time it was the 5th-generation normal size iPod that featured a color LCD and can play video. That thing got me through most of college, until I got my very first smartphone - an iPhone 4, Verizon edition - sometime during year four. The iPhone rendered the iPod redundant and obsolete, just like video did to the radio star.

So that was my experience with the most famous MP3 player of all time. Apple announced yesterday the last of the iPods - the iPod touch - has reached its end of life. The legendary lineage that revolutionized the music industry is no more. A hearty salute to a key piece of consumer tech history.

Autumn nights by the Bay.