Spent 5.5 hours yesterday fixing a stupid Wix page on our web site. God, I hate Wix.

“What can I tell you that I haven’t already told you?”

Haiku tu

I sent the previous haiku to my haiku-loving friend, Rani. This is her favorite:

Haikus are easy

But sometimes they don’t make sense

Refrigerator

Haiku time!

This is the first line.

This is the one after that.

Here is the last one.

(from a recent Durham County Library newsletter)

iOS app: Weather Strip

I’ve tried Carrot Weather and a few other third-party weather apps, but the recent Mac Power Users episode on weather apps convinced me that, for my needs, Apple’s default Weather app is fine.

However, I do like a more visual representation of the data and forecasts, and for some years now I’ve been using Weather Strip (don’t remember where I first read about it; Daring Fireball, maybe).

I like the side-scrolling, the clever graphics, and seeing the highs and lows drawn out for an entire week instead of isolated numbers in columns and tables. When prepping for a post-prandial walk, I can see at a glance the “feels like” temperature, sunset time, and a micro-forecast for the next hour. During the summer, I like keeping an eye on the dotted dew point line; when it’s riding close to the forecasted temperature, I know I’m in for a sweaty walk.

A Weather Strip subscription includes ability to use weather data from providers other than Apple, widgets, and family sharing.

Weather Strip user interface

Hats and fountain pens

Two things that, in my mind’s eye, are perfect for me, yet that I can never seem to pull off:

Hats. At various times I’ve tried wearing a wide-brimmed Stetson type hat, a Tilley adventure hat, a cloth cap like the other oldsters wear, even a derby when I was in high school (shut up). My hat-wearing is now less fantasy self-image and more utilitarian: a ball cap when I’m out walking to shade my nose from UV rays, a Tilley-type hat in summer to protect my ears and neck from the sun, and in winter what in my day we used to call a toboggan.

Fountain pens. I get along with the disposable Pilot fountain pens, but I’ve never been able to stick with a better class of pen. I would use a Lamy Safari, say, at home occasionally in my journal or at my desk but never often enough. I never felt comfortable making them an everyday writing instrument. I couldn’t stick it in my pocket and carry it with me, I never traveled with it for fear it would leak, and today, after inserting a full cartridge, the nib would not let a single drop emerge even after I tried a checklist of methods to unstop it.

I find I favor utility over style. I have some Zebra Sarasa pens sitting in my pen cup on my desk, one in my pocket (a folded bit of paper in my back pocket is all I usually need for scribbling a quick note), a couple in the tray by my bed, and a couple in the kitchen by the scratch pad. They’re cheap, portable, and reliable.