
My name is David Robins: Christian, lead developer (resume), writer, photographer, runner, libertarian (voluntaryist), and student.
This is also my son David Geoffrey Robins' site.
20080819: (Charlie Lake, BC to Watson Lake, YT: 547 miles.) Up 0800, packing and getting breakfast (generally cold cereal and hot drinks: tea or coffee). 62°F in the morning, going down to 47°F at 1150 near Buckinghorse River; 1244 drove through Prophet River, looking for fuel and not finding any. Fortunately we tried to keep at or above half a tank, since we expected fuel stations to frequently be few and far between on the Alaska Highway. 1322-1328, construction wait (56°F) and escorted by our first pilot car (no good reason; it wasn't dusty or difficult); 1345-1347, another wait. Gas at 1400 in Fort Nelson ($1.529/L, or $5.79/gal.), and we stopped for lunch at Subway and at the info center, heading on at 1450. Stopped at a scenic overlook 1536-1541; more construction 1622-1628, 1710-1713 (and pilot car); stopped at 1849 in Liard River for gas, heading on at 1905. We saw several moose and buffalo off to the side of this section of the highway. We reached Watson Lake at 2102, stopped for gas again at 2131, looked for hotels, didn't find any, and decided to drive on to Whitehorse through the night.
20080820: (Watson Lake, YT to Deadman's Lake, AK: 600 miles.) At 0148 we entered Whitehorse, the capital of the Yukon: color us unimpressed. We searched, but there was no room at the inns, except for the "Family Inn" on 4th, which was overpriced and marginal at best (I'd have certainly felt better if Canada had thought to include a right to keep and bear arms in their constitution). We took a room at 0236; full rate even though we had to be out by 1100. We stayed up until the deadline, too, sleeping until 1000 and then showering etc. and calling our agent from the lobby pay phone (we'd promised to check in daily, not that it ended up doing any good).
We left Tim Horton's in Whitehorse at 1124, got gas, and headed on, sleeping briefly at a rest area. At 1330-1350 we walked the "Spruce Beetle Trail" at the same rest area, and learned why so many of the trees were brown and dead-looking. More construction with a pilot car at 1449; gas. We started running into frost heaves, or hillocks in the road caused by underground frost, at 1630. They didn't impact driving too much. More construction 1734, got gas in Beaver Creek at 1828, and got out our passports. We stopped at the Alaska sign and border flags and monument 1854-1859; pretty dull day for pictures (got some on the way back).
20080816: (Duvall, WA to Boston Bar, BC: 200 miles.) We left at 1425 and stopped for gas in Bellingham (cheaper than Canada); we reached the Canadian border at Lynden at 1644 (temperature: 93°). (Lynden is only open 0800-0000, unlike most of the other crossings which are 24-hour.) I was a bit worried since my US passport hadn't arrived before we left, my Canadian passport was expired, I'd had to submit my original certificate of naturalization (which is illegal to copy) to apply for a passport. But we had no trouble. We followed the Trans-Canada (H-1) and arrived in Hope at 1803 (84°—still Fahrenheit even though we're in Canada, since I was reading from the Corolla's sensor). We camped at Anderson Creek, south of Boston Bar, arriving 1920. On looking at campsites we went down a rocky hill toward a nearby bridge, but there were no sites there, and coming back up spun the tires and kicked up some rocks, but no damage was done. We paid $16 for a fairly nice site, although there were a lot of noisy trains during the night. We had our tent (Iron Mountain, purchased in Memphis a few years back), cooler, lots of canned stuff (we had stew that night), and my Snow Peak stove. Played some Phase 10, but it got too dark to play at around 2030; we boiled water for hot chocolate and then went to bed.
20080817: (Boston Bar, BC to William's Lake, BC: 185 miles.) Up 0815, cold cereal and hot tea for breakfast; we drove out of the campground at 0952, stopping for gas and lunch (Subway) in Cache Creek at 1154 (77°), which is where we turned of H-1 and onto H-97, which becomes the Alaska Highway further north. Gas was $1.399/L, which is about $5.30/gal. (to compare, gas in Bellingham south of the border was $3.69/gal.). At 1320 we stopped at Chasm Provincial Park, which is literally a hole in the ground: it's down a side road a few miles and then there's a place to park and you can look over a fence at a chasm.
20080805: Mowed lawn.
20080809: Today and yesterday Broadstripe (the worst ISP in the world) called back and said they were going to "re-provision" the modem, but it hasn't done any good; as I type this, I'm in the middle of a 40+ minute outage (I have no idea how long it will go) and there have beep periodic half-hour outages over the past month at random times (they're at 3.58% downtime, or 7h33, for the month of August thus far, and that doesn't properly reflect the disruptive effects of their frequent 1-minute outages to e.g. VoIP calls). Boycotting the Olympics, since the Chinese suck; we need to nuke them before they get too rich and powerful and start doing the evil that they'd really like to, but can't because of fear of military retribution.
Honey's friend Rochelle (from school) was here from noon to around 2200; played some games: Quiddler, Scotland Yard, Boggle, and a new one she brought, Carcassonne (I won, so I rather like it… lots of monasteries; I didn't clue in to the farmer bit until late). She made custard, which was good (last time I made it it was very lumpy, so I watched closely… heating the milk is apparently a good idea, and watching/stirring it constantly).
I was watching Judge Judy and it gave me some ideas about sensible ways to handle alimony and child support; I already discussed alimony in a previous rant (internal link, sorry), but I didn't say much about child support. The deal today is that the man (it's couched as e.g. "non-custodial parent", but even when that isn't the man, the man is doing most of the paying) has to pay to support the child in "the manner to which they are accustomed." Total rot. The state should only require the man to pay to give the child (their equal half of) basic food and shelter—necessities. If the child wants to do better, perhaps they should elect to live with the father.
20080801: Code complete for co-authoring separate locks part; as I said to MS, now I can go from getting compiler errors to runtime errors, and so I did, starting with needing to handle the case of pushing locks with no existing server lock data. Went shooting at SVRC after work; made excellent progress. Still concentrating on the Glock. Last time I switched to shooting full (17 round) magazines rather than just 10 rounds; it seems to be easier to develop a rhythm. Shot some good groups; still fairly close range; I'll work up to distance later.
20080802: We planned out our day, and this is how it went: left at 0930, arrived at the WAC gun show in Puyallup at 1030; didn't buy anything, but handled a few SIGs that I liked. Left there 1200 and got to Port Orchard at 1320 (were aiming for 1300, but called ahead and said we'd be late) to buy a Nikon SB-800 flash and SC-29 sync cord from a guy (via Craigslist). Update: no box (fair enough; he thought he was keeping the items; not everyone keeps boxes like I do), and no soft case or stand, which the manual says were included. He seemed like a good guy, so although the possibility of it being stolen had run through our heads, given various factors that doesn't seem likely.
20080803: Open house, 1300-1600. We left for the day at 0800, to attend Brigade Days at Fort Langley, BC; arrived around 1130, no trouble at customs either way (I was slightly worried because my Canadian passport had expired, and although I'd applied for a U.S. passport, the application required them to take my original certificate of naturalization (which is illegal to copy, as stated plainly on the face of the document, although the lady at the passport office at King County District Court made me two copies when I asked), so my expired Canadian passport was all I had; fortunately the Canadian guy took it with no comment on leaving, and the U.S. guy asked if I had an extension and waved me through when I told him my U.S. passport was pending, without even asking to see any sort of receipt, which I had).
The fort was great; we saw the Simon Fraser arrival by canoe, greeted by a black powder salute; got lots of pictures, stopped for ice-cream around 1500 on the way out in the town of Fort Langley (picture a smaller Niagara-on-the-Lake); went to Wal-Mart and bought 3 DVDs with the two Canada-WalMart-only gift cards we had from Rebecca and Theo from Christmas ($15 x 2 cards, plus $5 in change I had and a few bucks on the credit card). Visited Grandma Martin in Abbotsford on the way back; got there about exactly at 1700 as we'd said (we expected to be &plusminus; 1 hour), and took her to Swiss Chalet; left around 2015, got home 2300.
Good things happening all around!.
20080720: Somehow, our (miserable) ISP, Broadstripe, has partially broken our network access: just Yahoo! and connected sites (e.g. yimg.com, which means Honey can't see pictures on the Drudge Report, and sites that use their store, such as OpticsPlanet, which appears to also be hosted by Yahoo!, are partially broken: the main site still comes up, but my cart is inaccessible). Called Broadstripe about it, they filed a ticket, but it came back around midnight; since the only outage was Yahoo!, it does look like it was their problem, except for the fact that I could still reach it from work (via VPN) and DownForEveryoneOrJustMe said it was up.
20080726: (Early morning.) Zune is still a piece of (crap). It likes to maintain a "collection" where it requires you to have files on your hard drive if they're on the Zune, and, here's the kicker: if you delete anything off of your disk, it deletes it from the device too. Now we're in a state where we can see (viewing the POS as a drive in Explorer) that files are there, but the Music section is empty. W T bloody F?
For the longest time the Zune wasn't letting me put any files on it—if I'm going to sell it (Yes, we have a buyer!) it needs at least one sample file to play; that's only reasonable. I finally formatted it with the secret handshake (it's tricky; time between the two key combinations is important), and managed to get some Handel onto it. Now I shall never burden my computer with connecting to it ever again.
20080713: We went to SVRC early afternoon; shot a few targets, then the EMP jammed while Honey was shooting it. Could have been a bad reload, possibly a bad grip causing the recoil to jam it, but I don't think so. It was jammed shut but I eventually managed to tap and rack it open; a casing was stuck in the feed end of the barrel (definitely only a casing—it had fired—or I wouldn't have been messing with it). I couldn't pry it out even with my Leatherman. We shot a few targets with the Glock, then left. When I got home I field stripped the EMP (had to clean it anyway) and a combination of needle-nosed pliers to pull it and pushing from the other end with my bore rod got it out. There did not appear to be any damage to the barrel. I also cleaned the Glock.
20080716: Called JMJ again (0850); I walked around outside, there are only the two front/back outlets, none have any GFCI buttons. They may come by.
20080706: Cooked chicken breasts in the crock-pot (slow cooker) again; I left them in about 8 hours (on low) this time, they were super-tender when they came out (fell apart when I was taking them out with the tongs). Still had some sausage left over from Friday, too. Just added some water and salsa to cook them (no tomatoes this time).
I was recently challenged in a email that spun off of a comment I made in Microsoft's Conservatives and Libertarians discussion list to be more specific about what I don't like about Republican Presidential candidate John McCain. So here's the list I came up with:Above-market pay for teachers and military; free education at all levels for everybody; more free money for people with kids; pay people to grow trees; "green" technology research; aid to foreign governments; health insurance for everyone; healthcare, welfare, and education for illegals; amnesty for illegals; cheap/free housing; nurse care; transportation; more farming subsidies; force companies to employ minorities and seniors (affirmative action); drugs for seniors; urban "community development"; workforce training; free money for minority businesses (more affirmative action); bail out dumb homeowners; increased minimum wage; lifetime subsidies for veterans; Internet for everyone; more FMLA.In my reality, you find a job, work hard, trading your skills for money, and use that money to buy the things you want. Liberals have a hard time with that for some reason. I think they also hate the idea of people not being dependent on the government: if government wasn't giving out free stuff, likely it would fall to neighborhood organizations, including churches, which would build stronger communities, possibly bring more people to Christ, and that'd annoy the Democrats to no end: they want the state to be your god, with congress as its prophet. Books finished: Asterix and the Chieftain's Shield, King of the Murgos, Asterix and the Class Act.DVDs finished: Star Trek: Voyager - Season Seven, The Wicker Man, Desperado.