Susan's Scribblings the Blog

A writer from the Philadelphia area shares the week online.
Susan's Scribblings the Blog
  • Who the Heck is Kayewer?
  • Monthly Archives: February 2010

    • Snow: The Great White Mess

      Posted at 1:10 am by kayewer, on February 28, 2010

      Winter can be depressing, but you know things are bad when you rejoice at seeing the edges of your lawn–which isn’t even green–appear under melting snow.  We’ve been under feet of the stuff for weeks, and are prepared to continue topping old snowfall totals for at least another week or more.  Work and school have been affected, businesses are hurting for customers, and hospitals are overwhelmed with cold-related deaths,  injuries and newborns coming to term and deciding for some odd reason that a blizzard is the ideal time to make their debuts.

      Oh, and there is cabin fever, too.  Those video games kids would normally spend 23 hours a day playing suddenly become boring when they have to be the only source of amusement while cooped up at home.  The video store is not easy to get to, and cable on demand hasn’t seen a new decent movie in months, and the regular programming is either in reruns or focused on the Olympics (where, by the way, they were begging for snow due to unusually mild weather).  Go figure.

      The local networks have also decided to postpone regular programming during storm activity to spend 12 hours or more telling everybody about the snow. I don’t understand the logic behind this.  Psychologically it’s more draining than watching the world out your front door vanish under impermeable white stuff.   They interview people braving the cold to find an open quick mart.  They show the radar maps every few minutes until those frontal systems start to look like an advancing enemy horde come to pillage our homes.    The commentators start to get punchy and lose track of their scripts, but they struggle on with no apparent goal in mind.  I’d prefer the escape found in Ellen DeGeneres or Dr. Phil to a full day of what I can see for myself outside my window.

      I notice that the news segments are always about the same subjects when it snows:  people buy out the shovels and ice melter at the local home stores, and supermarkets sell out of milk and bread.  It’s not as if people don’t buy out bread on regular weekdays (this is especially inconvenient when the delivery truck hasn’t arrived on schedule), but I’d like to know what people do with their shovels from the last storm, or even last season.  I know people like to buy the next year’s model car, but has it become necessary to buy a new shovel each year, too?  If you’re breaking shovels, you’re either working too hard or those shovels were made in a very cheap shop.

      Another thing about snow:  everybody dresses to stay warm, not to look like a Dr. Zhivago postcard.  The hat may not match the overcoat, and the boots may sound like the footfalls of a battalion, but we all have the same idea in mind, and we’re all just shoveling through it all and waiting to see it melt away when spring finally decides to show up.  Sometime in June, if we’re lucky.

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    • The Webcam Isn’t the Issue

      Posted at 3:28 am by kayewer, on February 21, 2010

      A Pennsylvania school district is in trouble because a laptop on loan to a student had its webcam activated after school hours.  The school claims it uses the camera technology to track missing computers, but a student was called on the carpet for what the webcam recorded during its activation,  family is pursuing an invasion of privacy legal action against the school.

      This is a road not yet travelled, so it will be interesting to find out what happens.  On one hand, the laptop was school property and on loan; on the other hand, how many pieces of school-issued equipment can possibly be used to tattle on its owner?  On another hand (consider me an octopus), students today can rework a piece of computer equipment in a matter of minutes, so a school district should be able to track anything that could be damaged outside its borders.  Would any parent want a student well versed in techno misbehavior, rigging a machine to transmit porn or other illegal materials to its next owner?

      Also, I don’t understand why students can’t use their own computers at home, unless all the hype I’m hearing about everybody owning computers is a lie.

      I feel a bit nervous about having a camera attached to any device that can access worldwide networks.  It may seem paranoid, but I would never have a computer in any area in which I might even be seen by a web camera adjusting my shirt sleeve.  With the dangers of “sexting” and other illicit behaviors going on in this world, I think schools should have some controls on hand to protect the students and their taxpaying parents, even if it does include a laptop device that tracks the whereabouts of the machine.  Activating a camera, however, might not have been a wise idea.  Instead, there should have been a GPS based locator.

      On the other hand, if I were a parent unable to be sure of what my child was up to, having that webcam access could save a life.

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    • Snowed In

      Posted at 2:37 am by kayewer, on February 14, 2010

      It has been a snow season for the books.  We were buried under so much of the white stuff in four out of six days, it will take forever to see the lawn again.  Fortunately all the neighbors pitched in to dig everybody out, but the problem of snow storage still exists.

      The lawns are piled up with snow; the sidewalks are surrounded on all sides by snow.  The city of Philadelphia, like many others, decided not to haul truckloads of snow to the waterways for dumping.  The environmental effects of putting snow inundated with lawn chemicals and other contaminants into the river make it an unwise choice.

      So what do we do with what could be called the weather equivalent of the houseguest who won’t leave?

      I wonder why we can’t melt and treat the water, then put it in the waterways?  Wouldn’t that create jobs and provide insurance against drought in the summer?  Can’t we send treated water to places like Haiti and Darfur?  Can’t it be used in manufacturing?

      Maybe we should all hold statewide ice hotel contests and make buildings and sculptures out of snow in our arena parking lots or local fields.

      How about one big nationwide snowball fight?

      There has to be a way to get rid of this stuff.  My driveway apron is so narrow, parking on the street should be temporarily banned, but it isn’t going to happen.  Sometimes driving around the cars parked on the street is like playing a real life video game; the only problem would be if you miss a turn.

      Snow is a necessary part of nature, but our society has yet to figure out how to live with it.  At least rain water runs off, but this frozen stuff hangs out for ever.  Also, we’re in for more of it, and it’s only February.

      I don’t want to see what happens if and when all this accumulation starts melting.

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    • I Slice (But Not in the Kitchen)

      Posted at 12:05 am by kayewer, on February 6, 2010

      I’m not a product tester, but sometimes I like to pass on some ideas if they work.  I picked up a new product the other day called the iSlice(R).  It’s a small ceramic cutting tool the size of an enlarged guitar pick, with a clear blue finger grip design and a silver tone cutter.  The cutting part is a tiny nub the size of a crumb, and I wondered if it could work as well as the terroristic razor blade cutter I was hoping to replace.  For about $5.00 it seemed like a reasonable investment.

      The ironic thing about buying this product is that you have to get inside the package it’s in first (yes, you need a package opener to get out the package opener).  Once I had tortured a pair of scissors on one edge of the flat packaging, I put the iSlice(R) to the test by trying it on the other side of the hard plastic shell.

      It works beautifully.  Simply hold the long edge parallel to your cutting surface and give a little swipe.  The edge is cut cleanly, with no rough spots to injure your hands.  In fact, the little nub does not seem to scratch your skin (I would recommend a little lotion on winter rough hands before you try any skin test, or you may get a dry skin white line).  It also holds a magnet, so it will cling to your fridge (or in my case, inside my cosmetic bag to my tweezers).

      I’m definitely into safety first, so anything like this product is welcome.  Now if we can just find one that can replace knives in the kitchen.

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