Monday, March 24, 2014
Thursday, March 13, 2014
Monday, March 3, 2014
Like Old Friends Revisited
I love Doonesbury — like a comfortable pair of old jeans that still fit.
Been reading Gary Trudeau's strip since I was in high-school. It seems I've grown up with Michael Doonesbury and his buddies, Zonker, BD, and all the other colorful characters Trudeau brought to life.
These days Doonesbury is on hiatus and the strip is rerunning days past.
Been reading Gary Trudeau's strip since I was in high-school. It seems I've grown up with Michael Doonesbury and his buddies, Zonker, BD, and all the other colorful characters Trudeau brought to life.
These days Doonesbury is on hiatus and the strip is rerunning days past.
This is the first Doonesbury strip ever. October 26, 1970
I don't remember it well... it was the 70s ya know.
All these years, I've kept up. After high school it was sometimes hard to find a newspaper that would run the strip which made it difficult to maintain my habit, but I managed. Now that it's online at Slate, it's much easier to follow on a regular basis.
Mr Trudeau intends to take a leave of absence from drawing
"Doonesbury" daily to write and produce a second season of "Alpha House"
for Amazon Prime Video. He's still doing new Sunday strips.
Personally, I think it'd be interesting to re-read all the old strips starting from this one until GT returns.
Like going home again.
I can still smell the undeniable aroma of illegal marijuana wafting through my memories.
Thursday, February 27, 2014
Remember Bagan?
Sprague Theobald and his Crew aboard Bagan.
It seems Mr. Theobald has penned an article for The Huffington Post that details the interpersonal rocky shoals he and his crew navigated while transiting the infamous Northwest Passage.
I'm a filmmaker and avid boater. I've done well with my documentaries and have amassed about 40,000 offshore miles. In 2006 I had the notion that I wanted to try and do what hundreds had lost their lives trying to do; find and transit the Arctic's infamous Northwest Passage on my 57 foot trawler, Bagan, and make a documentary about climate change.Link to article:
How a Death-Defying Sea Voyage Helped Mend the Relationship With My Kids That Divorce Destroyed
Wednesday, February 19, 2014
Monday, February 17, 2014
Steal Away
And, at 0-dark:thirty that's what I did.
onSpot WiFi is installing another V-Sat/WiFi Hotspot in the islands and the 7:00 AM flight for Staniel Cay was the best we could do. Awake at 3, on the road at 4, arriving at Watermakers Air at 5:30.
It's nice to be heading back to the islands, the gig will finally give me something to point my camera at and take some photos.
Unfortunately, Crew Istaboa was left behind in the bed; the boys were a bit confused, but at 3:30 so was I.
We made it to Hangar 19 early, unloaded the car, and carried all the communications gear and tools into the hangar. (No TSA here) Of course the box that contained all the bits of technology, that had been meticulously packaged, had to be opened and everything had to come out because the large container was about an inch too big to fit into the cargo hold of the plane.
But, at the last minute the kind folks at Watermakers Air did their magic and everything was loaded. I wish I could always fly Watermakers Air; smart, nice, and very resourceful.
Up and over Fort Lauderdale on a heading for Andros.
As we pass over the western coast of Andros the only word I can think of to describe it is... otherworldly. It's truly an interesting place and worth a quick read. Andros Wikipedia
About 10 minutes after landing at Fresh Creek to check in with customs we took off and were back in the air and flying toward the Exumas.
Then, literally, appearing out of the blue was Pipe Creek, Wild Tamarind Cay and Over Yonder Cay.
The anchorage at Big Majors Cay
The runway at Staniel Cay.
Home again and Tucker was there waiting for us. We loaded everything into Tuck's Albury, ran up Pipe Creek, and immediately went to work. Not a bad day at the office.
onSpot WiFi is installing another V-Sat/WiFi Hotspot in the islands and the 7:00 AM flight for Staniel Cay was the best we could do. Awake at 3, on the road at 4, arriving at Watermakers Air at 5:30.
It's nice to be heading back to the islands, the gig will finally give me something to point my camera at and take some photos.
Unfortunately, Crew Istaboa was left behind in the bed; the boys were a bit confused, but at 3:30 so was I.
We made it to Hangar 19 early, unloaded the car, and carried all the communications gear and tools into the hangar. (No TSA here) Of course the box that contained all the bits of technology, that had been meticulously packaged, had to be opened and everything had to come out because the large container was about an inch too big to fit into the cargo hold of the plane.
But, at the last minute the kind folks at Watermakers Air did their magic and everything was loaded. I wish I could always fly Watermakers Air; smart, nice, and very resourceful.
Up and over Fort Lauderdale on a heading for Andros.
As we pass over the western coast of Andros the only word I can think of to describe it is... otherworldly. It's truly an interesting place and worth a quick read. Andros Wikipedia
About 10 minutes after landing at Fresh Creek to check in with customs we took off and were back in the air and flying toward the Exumas.
Lots of this — my favorite color.
Then, literally, appearing out of the blue was Pipe Creek, Wild Tamarind Cay and Over Yonder Cay.
Isn't it amazing?
This is our customer base; our marketplace. On these islands, if they can't get
internet any other way, they call onSpot. We always find a way and we'll keep
it working where nobody else can. Then after it's stable and newer technology is developed, we go to work on making it better.
The anchorage at Big Majors Cay
The runway at Staniel Cay.
Home again and Tucker was there waiting for us. We loaded everything into Tuck's Albury, ran up Pipe Creek, and immediately went to work. Not a bad day at the office.
The lodge is our humble abode for the next couple of days.
Nice digs
Compass Blue-Net has been launched.
Nice digs
This install has gone quickly and, despite working on a remote island with no resources, it went off pretty smoothly. Will has all the hardware in place and we've got net all over the island . Tomorrow we'll work out the details then wrap it up. There's now a back-up for the present system that will also double the bandwidth, throughput, and reliability.
Also, for you folks who often enjoy Compass Cay and the island bungalows there you'll be happy to know there's now stable internet. Or... maybe you won't.
Compass Blue-Net has been launched.
Wednesday, February 12, 2014
Wednesday, February 5, 2014
Saturday, February 1, 2014
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