Sunday, December 31, 2006

Language Barrier

Alone at last.

My roommate's parents and sister flew in from Puebla, Mexico for the 21st-29th. While it was nice to have someone around from Christmas, it was also frustrating. They usually spoke English when addressing me, but anything else was mostly in Spanish. I took Spanish back in high school, but was never any good with it. I might catch one word in ten--enough to catch the general idea of the conversation, but that's it.

While they were here, they did do one large piece of good: the house is mostly packed. Nacho's family turned his life into shredded paper and cardboard boxes. I'm progressing more slowly, but that's OK since they used all the boxes, and I've got until the end of the week to pack. We're not really moving until Saturday, so I've got plenty of time.

For the move, things have hit some bumps. The apartment company doesn't like that Nacho's having house payment problems, so they and he are wrestling over whether he can move in now, or after the house is sold. Either way, I should be able to sign the lease on Tuesday.

Happy New Year.

Sunday, December 10, 2006

Of Alpha Particles and Cardboard Boxes

A few highlights of the week:

  • A couple months ago, our steel mill got a load of scrap that, somewhere in it, included a piece of radioactive material. We don't check loads for that sorta thing, so it wasn't known until the leftovers went to our recyclers, who does check that. They determined that the stuff had been inside some shielded box, and was vaporized during the melting process. It left traces throughout the refuse vents, and they've spent tons of money to clean those vents and install sensors to check incoming material. Monday was the day to get the sensors working, and I got pulled in to fix a couple of bugs our networking guys couldn't figure out. So I spent the morning waving a piece of Cesium-130 around to figure out all the combinations of how the alarms, software, and e-mail system worked. They say that the stuff is harmless, but anything involving the word "radioactive" doesn't exactly set me at ease...
  • I spent another day's worth of time at work packing up my office. No, I'm not quitting. Given the increase of personnel in our department, we've run out of room to shoehorn people into, so next week they're going to completely redo the cubicle layout of our office. None of us are going to be in the same place, so we've all had to pack up everything, and find temporary working spaces for next week. They're dumping me in the data center, which isn't exactly a quiet environment. I'm glad I have those bid Bose sound-man's headphones and the Creative Zen MP3 player I just bought.
  • I think we've found an apartment. A place called Treehouse Apartments, and we're going to get a 2-bed, 2-bath apartment (the B2 floor plan, if you want to have a look) that opens up at the beginning of the year. All the basic utilities are included with the rent, so we only have to take care of phone, internet, and satellite. When split between me and Nacho, it'll come out to a little less than what I'm paying Nacho now, and way cheaper for him. I'll be turning in the application tomorrow. Then I have to start packing what I won't need for the rest of the month.
  • I got an e-mail a couple days ago saying that a replacement TV card for my computer is on its way here. The one I bought a month ago never worked right, I'm hoping this one does better. The DVR is full and overwriting old shows. Also, got the RMA for my video card, which is also not behaving. Hope they get that back to me quick.
Until next post,
NAM

Saturday, December 2, 2006

There And Back Again

Two days ago, about this time, I completed my first business trip. I was sent to Minneapolis, Minnesota for a training course called Crucial Conversations, given by a course named Vital Smarts.

I was up ridiculously early Monday morning (which means anytime before dawn in my book, 5:30 in this case) to go the East Texas Regional Airport for a puddle-jumper to DFW. From there I sat around the terminal until my flight to Minneapolis, about 4 hours later. I finally got to Minneapolis around 1:30, got my rental car (a Mustang convertible--terrible instrumentation panel), and got lost trying to find my way around 1-way streets in downtown Minneapolis (in which 5th St. meets 7th Ave., with a few named streets mixed in to mess you up) to the Raddison Hotel, where the company had decided to put me up.

After I got settled in my room and checked-in with work, I found out that the class I was supposed to fly to Chicago for in a couple weeks was already full, and had to cancel plans with my folks. By the time that was done, it was past 7, so I decided to go looking for some food. I then discovered one of the great things about Downtown: the 2nd-story Skywalk that connects most of the buildings. You can get almost anywhere downtown without ever having to step foot on a sidewalk or go outside. The annoying parts were that it's a very confusing layout and there aren't many maps to help guide you from building to building, and that everything except the major stores closes up at 6, so all the food joints were already closed. Had to venture out of Downtown to get dinner, then come back in, which I survived and only got lost once. I didn't touch the car again until I was leaving town.

The class was 8-5 on Tuesday and Wednesday. Not a lot of revolutionary material, just general stuff about disengaging your emotions. They also gave us the book and audio CDs, which I have yet to read. The intent of my going to the course was to evaluate it for the rest of my department, and my general evaluation was that there may be some nuggets to pull out, but the course itself isn't worth sending people through normally. The fact that I was the only non-manager there didn't help much (most people were managers or executives from hospitals). I've still got to go through the CDs and book to see if there's anything more directed there.

Tuesday evening I decided to venture down to the Mall of America, courtesy of the Light Rail that runs straight there from a station 2 blocks from my hotel. Unfortunately I didn't know it was 2 blocks, and ended up walking to the wrong end of the Nicollet Mall before figuring that part out. At the MoA I went straight to the aquarium, which didn't exist when I was last there 10 years ago. It's a walk-through underwater aquarium, so my engineering training kicked in right away at how many tons of water pressure were around me trying to turn me into filleted bits of shark food. Having stingrays and tiger sharks resting on the tube directly above me didn't help much with that part, but by the time I got halfway through I was getting over it. They have a small touch pool near the end, where they keep some smaller stingrays and sharks. They'd just fed them, so they were very active, and I eventually mustered up the courage to touch one of the stingrays; very slimy feeling, but I'm not sure how much of that was just the water. That was the last stop in the aquarium, so I went on and walked around all 3 main levels before grabbing dinner and heading back to the Light Rail station. I didn't buy anything except dinner and a Strawberry Banana Julius, not that I'd planned to. A mall is never a good place to buy something, especially not a mall designed as a tourist trap.

Wednesday evening, the class was over, and I was debating what to do. I found out that the Hollidazzle, a small Christmas parade down the Nicollet Mall, was starting that night. The cold weather had finally come in that day, and the temp was about 12 degrees, but that didn't deter me from going down to see it. I even was able to get pictures of about half the floats before my camera's batteries froze; I'll try to post some of then here in the near future. After that, I went back to my room to warm up, and watch CBS for the night. However, during CSI:NY, I heard real-life gunfire outside my window. I wasn't able to see the actual shooting site; I was on the 6th floor, and there was a bus between us. From what they said on the news later, two guys got into an argument, one of them pulled a gun, and I heard 4 or 5 shots. It took the police about 5 minutes to get there, and the ambulance another 5 past that. Rather poor response time in my opinion, given it was light traffic downtown at that hour, but the guy who was shot was moving and looked OK when they got him into the ambulance. I just checked the local news station, and it says that as of the next morning he was listed in serious-to-critical. That kinda spoiled my mood for the rest of the evening.

Thursday morning, I was up too early again, and got lost again trying to find the I-35 on-ramp. Managed to get to the airport eventually, and checked my car back in with Avis. The flight to DFW was fairly good, though we hit some turbulence during our descent. I even think I got some sleep on the flight, which is amazing. When we got to DFW, I sat around for a while, then walked all of B Concourse, and found that it connected directly to D, so I walked all of that too. Then, an hour before my flight's supposed to leave, they announce that they're providing a bus to Longview for anybody who wants it. They hadn't canceled the flight yet, but given the cold weather had followed me from Minnesota and it was actually snowing outside, plus what the turbulence we'd encountered on the way in would do to a puddle-jumper, I decided the bus was a good idea. We didn't leave the terminal until almost an hour after our plane was supposed to leave, and there were only a half dozen of us on the bus, so I think the plane made it. However, we made it to Longview safe and sound, and it worked out since that's when Nacho had just gotten into town and was able to pick me up.

Friday I was back at work, in the mad rush to get caught up. Now it's the weekend, and I'm starting to look ahead; I've still got more catching up to do, and Nacho and I need to go look at an apartment on Monday. We hope we like it, because the price is good and it's the close to both LeTourneaus, while still being in what looks like a safe neighborhood. More on that in my next post, hopefully.

Thursday, November 23, 2006

And So It Begins

Well, first off, a blessed Thanksgiving to you all.

After finding that one of my college friends has been writing her own blog, I decided that it's about time that I give this blogging thing a shot.

First, an introduction to those of you who have forgotten me, or don't know me:

My name is Nathaniel A. "Joker" Miller. I'm a 25 year-old, perpetually single geek. If that amount of information doesn't scare you off, congratulations. You're braver than most.

I work as the Junior Systems Administrator in the Information Technology Department at LeTourneau, Inc. (soon to be known as LeTourneau Technologies, Inc.) in Longview, Texas, where I am directly responsible for approximately 60 servers and most of the software on them, as well as having partial responsibility for another 20 servers at various other locations throughout the company.

I live outside of Longview with my part-time roommate and college friend Juan "Nacho" Lopez, a Ph.D. candidate in Biomedical Engineering at Louisiana Technical University in Ruston, LA. Nacho owns the house we live in, and I "rent a room" from him. A pretty good deal, given how infrequently he's around. I practically have my own house, without all the extra expenses.

I was born and raised in Sioux Falls, SD, where my father was the engineer for KNWC radio and my mom was a captioner and home-school teacher. I have a younger sister by almost five years, Carolee, who is currently a junior at Judson College in Elgin, IL studying Architecture.

I attended public school until 8th Grade, at which point my mother started home-schooling me and my sister. We attended Central Baptist Church until I was 10, at which point we went with Grace Church, a plant Central started, with which my father served a term as an elder, my mother was head of the Missions Committee, and my whole family was the primary Sound/Media Crew.

My family moved to Elkhart, IN just before I turned 18, where my parents are now serving with HCJB World Radio. My dad is a Design Engineer, and my mom helps in Accounting section. 8 months after we moved to Elkhart, I left home for college at LeTourneau University here in Longview, where I studied Computer Science Engineering, and later added a second major for Engineering, Computer Concentration (yes, they are different things, but there's a lot of overlap). I was placed on a floor known as 41, which is where I met Nacho and many other great brothers with whom I spent 5 years.

After graduation, I was looking for a job in Computer Logic/Hardware Design, but was coming up empty. To pay the bills for the summer (during which I was finishing my Senior Engineering Project), I got a job as a Student Field Technician with LeTourneau, Inc.'s IT department. After the project was done and they kicked me off campus, I hadn't found anything else to do, so I just kept working at LeTourneau and moved in with Nacho, who had 1 room open at the time. I continued that way for over a year, until LeT-Inc was able to offer me a position - as Systems Administrator. I was surprised, but given the job stability and a not-small raise, I accepted.

Since shortly after coming to Longview, I've been attending Fellowship Bible Church, where I've been involved with the College Group and, in the last few months I've joined the Men's Ministry.

That pretty well sums up my life to this point. I'll have some things occurring over the next couple weeks that I'll try to write about here, but as anybody can tell you, my communication skills are not all that great. Hopefully I'll be able to keep writing here, though I don't know if anybody will read it.

Until next time,
NAM