My Life

This Blog

Posted in My Life, Tech on October 28th, 2009 by Jahos – Be the first to comment

I’m going to be turning this into my own personal web-blog. It’s going to morph over time into a personal blog of sorts of things that I find interesting.

I am a novice photographer and an experienced tech professional. I think my unique perspective and my dark sense of humor might be a nice ride for whoever wants to come along.

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Vegas Baby

Posted in My Life, Vacation on July 3rd, 2008 by J – Be the first to comment

Heading to Vegas over the weekend for the 4th. Staying at a crappy place off the strip (approx 2 blocks away) so it shouldn’t be too bad. We will be heading to a show, most likely O. The g/f is taking me for my birthday. It is also her birthday so I need to think of something to get her… suggestions?

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Birfday

Posted in My Life on June 30th, 2008 by J – Be the first to comment

My B-day is today. Yesterday we had a BBQ/Pool Party. Beer + Meat = Fun.  The girlfriend is taking me out tonight for dinner in the city, I don’t know where, but it’s exciting.

Gifts?

  • Flip-Flops
  • Board shorts
  • Slacks
  • Money
  • Booze
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Kaiser Permanente Panorama City

Posted in My Life on May 12th, 2008 by J – Be the first to comment

Kaiser Permanente Health Care
13652 Cantara St
Panorama City, CA 91402
Phone: (818) 375-1737

This a picture of the new hospital in Panorama City. It’s been open since March 08′. While the quality of care is excellent, the building itself has many faults.

  1. The rooms for extended stay have local television only, plus some random local tv stations.
    • This made me extremely angry as a family member has been bed-ridden for over a week. It’s just not acceptable to expect people to watch the channel 9 news all day. If someone is sick, trying to recover, you should want to make their day enjoyable (as much as you can).
  2. While the floors are large, they have many blind spots.
    • Talk about the architects use of the classic “Square”, this guy/girl really goes to town on the floors. Nearly every room, turn, and hallway is a sharp 90 degree turn. I’ve already heard nurses complain about it.
  3. Three Elevators for the building. If your not happy about waiting for an elevator, good luck! Not only do the elevators run slowly, but they make an incredible “BEEP!” on each floor. So much so, that you can hear it between floors just waiting in the lobby. And when I say BEEP, think 1980’s buzzer BEEP; not the digital beep we know and love.
  4. Food. I think this might tie in with #1, but really you need to make the patient’s stay AND their families stay enjoyable! The cafeteria is the worst i have seen in a long time. The food is old and prepackaged, much like if you went to prison (not that I would know). They do open the grill on weekdays near lunch time, which is actually very good. But if you get sick… god-forbid.. on a weekend, you’ll be running to IN-N-OUT, Carl’s, Macdonald’s, etc. They can’t hire someone to flip some burgers on the weekend? You got to be kidding me.
  5. One last note, most might not think about. Lighting and Sinks. They installed these sinks that motion detect your hands when you place an object in front of them. Good idea right? NOPE!, they did it all wrong, the sensor is too high, so when the water comes out it sprays all over the place. They didn’t install enough water heaters either! Showers are luke-warm at best. Also in the bathroom there is only 1 light. Why is this a problem? How about when you close the certain and want to see some shampoo go into your hand before you place it on your head…

Bad build, but great care. By the way, a 1 night stay at this hospital costs $11,000 a day. I’ll post the bill shortly. American health care, at 11k a day, you can see why it’s broken.

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John J. Grove – Obiturary

Posted in My Life on March 28th, 2008 by J – Be the first to comment

The  obituary below has a special meaning to me. This was my grandfather. He was a great person and I didn’t want the post below to get lost in internet dust. So I am saving it here.

“Obituary: John J. Grove / Key player in Renaissance I, the creation of Point State Park

Friday, February 01, 2002

By Patricia Lowry, Post-Gazette Staff Writer

In 1936, two years after he graduated from the University of Pittsburgh, John J. Grove was tapped for a special assignment: hosting tours for people who wanted to visit the campus’ spectacular new neo-Gothic skyscraper.

From June to August 1936, Mr. Grove led more than 6,000 people from all over the world up to the Cathedral of Learning’s 36th floor, answering questions and noting points of interest “with a flourish and a smile,” as The Pittsburgh Press reported.

It was the beginning of a career as a Pittsburgh proselytizer that ultimately led to Mr. Grove’s playing a key role in the city’s first renaissance and the development of Point State Park.

Mr. Grove, who was 90, died Saturday in Los Angeles of natural causes. His health had been in decline since a kidney infection in December, said his wife, Jo. The Groves moved to Sherman Oaks, Calif., four years ago to be near their daughter and her family.

When John and Jo Grove married in 1960, The Press called him “one of the town’s more eligible bachelors.” And why not? At 48, Mr. Grove was the personable assistant director of the Allegheny Conference on Community Development, the powerhouse group of corporate executives that tackled smoke and flood control and Downtown redevelopment. During the 1950s, Mr. Grove had become a leader in selling the city’s renewal here and elsewhere, in speeches to local groups and at national conferences.

And oh yes, “he used to drive a Chrysler convertible and people thought that was pretty cool,” said Robert Pease, the conference’s former executive director.

But that wasn’t what attracted his future wife.

“Johnny was an absolute perfect gentleman, and he was interested in so many things and so many people and involved in so much,” Jo Grove said Wednesday morning, a few hours before her husband’s funeral in Los Angeles.

With his marriage, she said, her husband acquired a ready-made family, and soon became a devoted father to his wife’s two children from a previous marriage.

In 1939, Mr. Grove, who had studied history and public relations at Pitt, left the university to become public relations director for the new Buhl Planetarium. During the war, he served in the Lend-Lease and Foreign Economic administrations in Washington, D.C. He returned to Pittsburgh in 1947 as public relations director for the Allegheny Conference, and in 1952 became assistant director, in charge of documenting and communicating the conference’s work through written reports and speeches.

“He was a person who could do anything,” said Pease, who joined the conference as an engineer in 1953 and later became its leader. One thing Pease was especially grateful for: “One of my weak suits is remembering names, and he used to stand close to me at functions and whisper names to me.”

By 1962, Mr. Grove, who grew up in Pittsburgh’s East End, was telling the Parent-Teacher Association’s regional conference that “the race to the suburbs” was no solution to urban problems.

“These smug suburbs should realize that in 10 to 15 years, they will be facing the same problems” as East Liberty and the North Side, Mr. Grove said.

Press coverage played an essential role in creating public understanding of and support for the conference’s work. As secretary of the conference committee on Point State Park, Mr. Grove kept newspaper reporters well supplied with background stories and photographs, writes Robert C. Alberts in “The Shaping of the Point,” his 1980 book on the park’s creation.

“Every time we went to Harrisburg to get a major decision, we had a big spread in the Pittsburgh papers the day before that explained what we were doing and why it was needed,” an anonymous conference member told Alberts. “The gentlemen in the offices in Harrisburg had the stories laid out on the table before them, so that half our work had been done for us before we arrived.”

After retiring from the conference in 1975, Mr. Grove became the state’s supervisor in the operation and maintenance of the completed park.

In addition to his wife, he is survived by a stepson, Robert Royer of Laughlin, Nev.; a stepdaughter, Carol Coller, of Los Angeles; eight grandchildren; and nine great-grandchildren.”

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2009 Snowboard Setup (Vans, Flow, Gnu)

Posted in My Life on March 21st, 2008 by J – Be the first to comment

So I finally have my new Snowboarding gear ready for 2009. It was all pretty cheap in all since I waited till the right time to buy. See Below for details.

Encore Boots

Boots
2008 Vans Encore (BLACK)
Price : US $84.50

Flow M11 Bindings

Bindings
Flow M11 (
BLACK)
Price : US$119.50

Gnu Snowboard

Board
GNU 11-UP Series

Price : US$240.00

Total: ~$445

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My New Snowboard

Posted in My Life, Vacation on March 17th, 2008 by J – Be the first to comment

Here’s my new gnu snowboard I bought over the weekend. It’s a good board and the price was only 240 bucks from zj’s on their annual end-of-season sale.

Gnu Snowboard

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CRS Mammoth 2008!

Posted in Vacation on March 14th, 2008 by J – 1 Comment

I had a great time in mammoth this year. I even went to ZJ’s and bought a new board!

svgallery=CRS_Mammoth

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Clipper Game

Posted in My Life on March 3rd, 2008 by J – Be the first to comment

I recently went to a Clipper game with my girl. See our awesome pic here!

IMG_1290.jpg

I would be lying if i said I wasn’t testing some new picture options with wp :)

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LA Auto Show 2008

Posted in My Life on November 21st, 2007 by J – Be the first to comment

In general this year was the worst auto show in the past 7 years. There is no innovation, no new way of thinking, and there were only 2 concept cars. The problem was that the concept cars were not that outrageous, they were just variations on old ideas. Very sad showing, maybe it’s a sign that companies aren’t spending much in terms of R&D? I guess that would make sense in the States since GM is rolling downhill.

 

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