Katie by Katie

Usually when I am walking the dogs in the morning, it is about the same time as the kids are walking to school. I think that’s one of the reasons why Katie used to always lead me to the park was to see all the kids cutting through it to school. So Katie made a few friends with some of the kids including a girl, also named Katie, who lives just down the street. Her Mom had asked about Katie’s absence from our walks, so they knew she had died. This morning they gave me some flowers and Katie made the card below. She included Katie’s shoes in the drawing, which always made Katie stand out since no other dogs in the neighborhood wear shoes.

katiemem

Katie Collage

I thought I would use some points I have saved up at My Coke Rewards to get some kind of photo art at Shutterfly with pictures of Katie. I don’t have enough pictures for a book, so I made a 20×16 collage poster that I should get in a few days. There are pictures from when I first got Katie, all the way through to this year, including a couple of pictures with Clio, one from Stone Mountain. You should be able to click for a larger version.

katiecollage

Mechanical Keyboard

I remember reading a number of years ago in a column about gifts for computer people that there was a really great keyboard that used old style switches under each key unlike almost every keyboard out there. I remembered that they were called cherry switches and mentioned that to Eric. He said that’s what his keyboard has in it (it figures; for a guy with no money, he has some of the nicest stuff). So this started me looking at possibly getting a new keyboard. The Cherry MX switches (it’s a brand name; they are actually made in Germany) are mechanical and come in a lot of different types. Geeky computer people and gamers are very particular about the specific type of Cherry switch in their keyboard. It seems like most prefer “red” switches (the plastic plunger is actually red plastic; different types of switches use different colors of plastic, but you wouldn’t know what color the switch was unless you pry off the key cap) which require a very light touch but has no tactical or sound feedback. That doesn’t mean they are quiet, just that they lack a distinct click. You still get a clack or thump as you press the key all the way down and bottom out, and this noise is louder than with most keyboards which have keys sitting on a rubber mat inside the keyboard. The brown switch has tactical feedback as you feel, but don’t hear, a click as you press. Then the blue switch has tactical feedback plus an audible click. This is what Eric has. The blue switch also requires a little heavier touch than the red or brown. The force required to press the key is usually measured in grams (or centinewtons, which are basically the same thing): red and brown take 45 grams, blue takes 50 grams. There are other colors as well. Black is stealthy like the red, but requires a heavier touch, while green is like the blue except it also requires an even heavier touch of 80 grams.
Continue reading “Mechanical Keyboard”

First In First Out

One of the things that comes up around tax time is capital gains. Short term gains for investments held less than one year are taxed as regular income (25% for me) while any gains on investments held for more than one year are taxed at only 15%. I’m usually investing for the long term with mutual funds, whereas I will be happy to sell a stock after it goes up 20% regardless of how long I have held it. Every now and then when I get close to 1 year, I might hold on to get a long term gain instead of short term.

With mutual funds, I might move money around every now and then, but not really that much. I’ve had investments in the same mutual fund sometimes for 10 years or more, so anytime I sell anything in that fund, it will be a long term gain. Even if I buy some shares and then sell them the next month, the IRS sees that as long term because I can sell the older shares instead of the ones I just bought. The only time I get messed up with that is with wash sales where I sell at a loss within a month of buying shares. I got some wash sales during the financial crisis with Suntrust stock as its stock price went on a roller coaster ride and I was hitting 20% gains or losses within a few days.
Continue reading “First In First Out”

Hargis Family Bible

Aunt Edythe had this bible and George included a scan of the pages in his giant book of genealogy. I thought I would try to transcribe it. The bible belonged to Dr. Robert Bell Smith Hargis who was a doctor in Pensacola before and after the Civil War. He played a pretty prominent position in the fight against yellow fever, writing a couple of books about it, and also getting yellow fever in the process. Dr. Hargis, originally from North Carolina, wasn’t related to us, but his wife was a descendant of Dr. Eugene Sierra, like us. Their son, Dr. John Whiting Hargis, married Paw-Paw’s sister, Edythe Grant (hmmm . . . also a descendant of Dr. Sierra; by my calculations they were second cousins, once removed), and their daughter was Mom’s cousin, Edythe.

Each page has two columns, so I am including the headers for those columns as “Births,” “Marriages,”, or “Deaths.” In keeping with the format of the original pages, some additional marriages and deaths were added at the end. Some of it is hard to read and I may not have gotten things right, and some is impossible to read. I will post pictures if I get them.

Continue reading “Hargis Family Bible”